5
Next Steps and Recommendations
In this chapter the committee presents its conclusions and details its recommendations for next steps regarding the use of half-facepiece elastomeric respirators in health care settings both for routine use and during a public health emergency. The chapter begins with the decision factors the committee used in reaching its conclusions, which are followed by the committee’s recommendations for next steps. The committee’s conclusions and recommendations focus on reusable elastomeric respirators, but given the task of exploring the feasibility of these respirators in health care settings, broader issues of respiratory protection for health care workers are integral to these discussions and are also addressed.
DECISION FACTORS AND CONCLUSIONS: ROUTINE AND SURGE USE OF REUSABLE ELASTOMERIC RESPIRATORS
Decision Factors
In weighing its decisions regarding conclusions and recommendations, the committee explored a wide range of scientific and implementation issues regarding reusable elastomeric respirators and carefully examined the challenges and benefits of these respirators (see Table 5-1) as discussed throughout the report, including consideration of the
- Demonstrated efficacy of reusable elastomeric respirators, and the
- Extent of feasibility of clinical implementation, particularly regarding
- User comfort and tolerability;
- Patient perceptions;
- Cleaning, disinfection, and maintenance;
- Fit and fit testing;
- Value analysis (cost, storage, etc.);
- Contribution to a culture of safety; and
- Potential for incorporation into education and training programs.
TABLE 5-1 Routine and Surge Use of Reusable Elastomeric Respirators
Definition | Examples | Advantages | Challenges | |
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Routine use |
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Surge use |
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The adoption of reusable elastomeric respirators in routine use—even in selected settings—could increase institutional and staff familiarity with the devices and facilitate successful adoption during a surge event. Respiratory protection programs would be able to use the existing fit-testing process to fit-test employees for both disposable filtering facepiece respirators and reusable elastomeric respirators. Existing training materials would be in place and could be expanded to all affected employees. Cleaning and disinfection protocols would need to be refined and standardized. This may prove to be the largest hurdle, yet one that could be overcome with some sustained research and standardization efforts.
Conclusions
Using on the decision factors listed above, the committee carefully considered the evidence in Chapters 1 through 4 and offers the following conclusions:
Conclusion 1: Efficacy of Reusable Elastomeric Respirators The committee concludes that research studies in controlled laboratory settings have demonstrated the efficacy of reusable elastomeric respirators.
Conclusion 2: Routine Use of Reusable Elastomeric Respirators The committee concludes that reusable elastomeric respirators could be a viable option for respiratory protection programs for routine use in health care when logistic and implementation challenges are addressed, including education, training, cleaning, disinfection, and storage challenges. Advantages of integrating reusable elastomeric respirators into day-to-day practice and regular training would include the increased familiarity of staff with these respirators and the implementation and continued improvement of policies and practices for cleaning, disinfection, and maintenance, leading to better preparedness in the event of the need for broader use during an emergency or pandemic situation.
Conclusion 3: Surge Use of Reusable Elastomeric Respirators The committee concludes that reusable elastomeric respirators could be a viable option for use as needed in surge situations (e.g., influenza pandemic, airborne transmissible disease outbreak, unknown hazard) when logistic and implementation challenges are
addressed, including challenges related to cleaning, disinfection, and storage, as well as just-in-time fit testing and training for staff unfamiliar or untested for these respirators. A smooth transition to surge use would be expedited and enhanced if reusable elastomeric respirators were a part of the health care facilities’ day-today respiratory protection program.
Conclusion 4: Health Care Needs Regarding Respiratory Protection The committee concludes that addressing the respiratory health needs of health care workers—across their wide range of settings and jobs (including home health caregivers, rural clinic personnel, outpatient emergency medical personnel, food and custodial staff, nursing home staff, and hospital staff)—will require the design of innovative reusable respirators and the implementation of robust respiratory protection programs. These needs include taking into account the distinctive characteristics of the health care workplace, including patient care responsibilities (i.e., multiple patients with varying health conditions); sudden and non-routine need for respiratory protection; and the possibility of needing to address unknown, potentially lethal, and highly transmissible infectious agents.
Conclusion 5: Implementation Gaps
The committee concludes that urgent action is needed to resolve gaps in knowledge and leadership on reusable respiratory protection in order to protect the health and safety of health care workers, particularly in an influenza pandemic or an epidemic of an airborne transmissible disease. The gaps include the
- Need for innovation and design of reusable respirators for use by health care workers, with attention given to communication, comfort, and wearability concerns, and ease of maintenance;
- Lack of standardized processes for the cleaning and disinfection of reusable respirators;
- General lack of knowledge among health care workers and leaders about the transmission of airborne infectious diseases and about protective equipment (e.g., droplet versus aerosol pathways for airborne transmission, differences between respirators and medical masks);
- Need for estimates of the total costs of using reusable elastomeric respirators including costs of training, cleaning, disinfection, and maintenance and comparisons of total costs of using other types of respiratory protection;
- Paucity of education programs, training materials, and strategies for change that focus on both basic, routine use and transitions from routine to surge situations for respiratory protection;
- Need for harmonized and consistent guidance and standards by regulatory and policy-making authorities that include clear direction on the level of respiratory protection needed and on the stockpiling responsibilities of government and private-sector organizations;
- Need for collaborative efforts by health care management and workers to considerably improve the monitoring and championing of respiratory protection in clinical care across the wide range of health care settings and professions in routine health care and surge situations;
- Need for well-integrated and comprehensively evaluated implementation plans for transitioning between regular and surge use of respirators and between types of respirators;
- Need for established accountability policies for each facility’s respiratory protection program that include responsibilities of health care leaders, including administrators and managers, health care workers, infection prevention and control specialists, and occupational health and safety professionals; and
- Incomplete information for health care facilities concerning stockpiling expectations and the make and model of respirators stored in state and federal stockpiles.
NEXT STEPS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The committee sees potential long-term value in the use of elastomeric respirators both during routine use and during public health emergencies; therefore, it has developed the following set of recommendations to promote their use and protect health care workers and, as a result, improve patient care. The committee reaffirms the recommendations in the 2008
Institute of Medicine study covering all types of personal protective equipment (PPE) and presents the following recommendations.
Incentivize and Conduct Research
Respiratory protection and its implementation in the health care field continue to evolve and will require extensive research and development efforts. Currently there is a dearth of knowledge on many aspects of respiratory protection for health care workers. Lessons learned and research done to support respiratory protection in a number of industries (see Chapter 2) have helped inform the use of respirators in health care, but much remains to be learned about how to address the unique circumstances found in health care. As noted earlier, the nature of health care work includes providers being responsible for multiple patients with varying health conditions and therefore needing to prevent transmission between and among patients and providers; the sudden and non-routine need for respiratory protection; the possibility of needing to address unknown and potentially lethal and highly transmissible infectious agents; and the absence of an “industry-standard” protocol ensuring that health care workers are allowed to perform their jobs only if they conform to the safety requirements associated with the job. There are currently gaps in knowledge in a number of areas, ranging from the basic science of the transmission of many airborne diseases to design and technology innovations in respirators, especially reusable elastomeric respirators, and to improved fit, degree of protection, and ease of use. Incentives to innovate and move beyond current technologies and designs will be critical for increasing compliance with the use of these devices and thereby enhancing the health and safety of health care workers at all times and in all health care settings. This work could be conducted effectively and efficiently through a national collaboration of health care facilities working with university partners, government agencies, and other relevant organizations.
Recommendation 1: Expand Research to Improve Respiratory Protection
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority—working in collaboration with man
ufacturers, researchers, infection prevention and occupational safety and health professional organizations, and other relevant agencies and organizations—should expand their support for and conduct of research on respiratory protection and reusable elastomeric respirators in the following areas for the ongoing improvement of respiratory protection for health care workers. This research should involve the collaborative efforts of a nationwide network of health care facilities that can address the research gaps, expand and refine the results for underserved health care settings, and share lessons learned and best practices.
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Infection Risk Research for Hazard Assessment
- Determine and better understand the relative contribution of the routes of transmission for potentially airborne transmissible pathogens to underpin and improve hazard assessment in health care to ensure proper respiratory protection;
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Cleaning and Disinfection Research
- Identify and disseminate guidance and standards for cleaning and disinfecting reusable respirators (including cleaning and disinfection agents that are mycobacterial, viral, and sporicidal) without damaging the integrity of the devices and degrading their performance;
- Develop and evaluate practical and effective cleaning, disinfection, and maintenance processes, systems, and equipment for reusable respirators that could be implemented for routine use and could be rapidly deployed for emergency use in health care environments;
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Respirator Research and Development
- Develop the next generation of reusable respirators to meet the needs of health care workers, as informed by prior research (e.g., Project BREATHE), including but not limited to innovative materials and designs to enhance comfort (including the weight of the device, CO2 buildup, temperature, work of breathing); ease of cleaning and disinfection; communication intelligibility
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while speaking; attention to visual aesthetics to enhance patient perceptions and interpersonal interactions; individual fit customization; sensors to detect breaches and provide notifications concerning end of service life; and potentially disposable pre-filters to minimize cross-contamination;
- Develop and evaluate rapid fit-test methods and new user seal-check training methods for reusable respirators, including exploring new technologies that provide an indicator of the quality of the fit;
- Standardize respirator sizing parameters among manufacturers to facilitate fit testing, with attention to seamless and rapid transitions to products from different manufacturers during a health care crisis;
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Market Research
- Conduct research to understand the barriers to market entry for a health care–specific, reusable respirator;
- Develop robust value-analysis processes for decisions on respirator purchases that include inter-professional decision making and input from manufacturers and product distributors;
- Develop total cost estimates for reusable elastomeric respirators (including purchase, storage, cleaning, training, fitting, use) to compare with total cost estimates of other types of respirators;
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Behavior and Safety Culture Research
- Evaluate clinical programs that use reusable elastomeric respirators to more fully understand their processes and identify effective practices;
- Using implementation science methods and information, develop and evaluate best practices to improve adherence to respiratory protection by health care workers (this should include collaborative leadership, management, worker, and union decision making; practice champions) during routine use across the range of health care settings and jobs;
- Develop, implement, and evaluate best practices, implementation strategies, and integrated transition plans to ensure the health and effectiveness of the health care workforce through rapid transitions to new products and proper use of respirators during emergencies (rapid fit testing, just-in-time training, etc.); and
- Build on existing research about health care worker attitudes, knowledge, and perceptions on the use of respirators with a focus on the use of elastomeric respirators in various work settings.
Effective Respiratory Protection Programs, Training, and Education
The primary goal of a respiratory protection program is to ensure the safety of the health care worker either during the routine care of patients or during a public health emergency triggered by a pandemic or other airborne transmissible disease outbreak. Respirators and other personal protective equipment should be viewed as one part of a continuum of safety that begins with engineering/environmental controls and administrative controls (see Chapter 1). Respiratory protection programs require a systems approach. Effective respiratory protection efforts depend on
- The efficacy of the respiratory protective device,
- Compliance by health care workers to data-driven policies, and
- Regular and consistent organizational monitoring and follow-up.
All of these elements are driven by the culture of safety in the organization and its leadership, which includes the organization’s commitment to safeguarding worker health by placing significant emphasis on the respiratory protection program and providing economic and logistical support. All these facets must come together for the successful protection of health care workers in clinical settings both during regular operations and during public health emergencies. There has been little attention paid to reusable elastomeric respirators or to exploration about how to engage the health care workforce in respiratory protection education and training. Such engagement is critical to ensure the health and safety of health care workers at all times, especially in the event of a public health emergency.
Recommendation 2: Ensure Robust Respiratory Protection Programs and Training
The leadership of health care facilities, professional associations, professional schools, continuing education programs, and accrediting and credentialing organizations (in collaboration with National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and other parts of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], the Occupational Safety and Health Administration [OSHA], the Joint Commission, health care workers, and other relevant stakeholders) should ensure that ongoing education and training for robust respiratory protection programs, including on the use of elastomeric respirators for health care workers, are a high priority for health care workers, managers, and leaders; that compliance is actively monitored; and that respiratory protection is championed and financially well supported across the range of health care institutions and settings. To implement this recommendation,
- Health care professional associations, professional schools (including continuing education programs), and accrediting and credentialing organizations (in collaboration with infection prevention and occupational health and safety professional organizations) should adopt, implement, and evaluate a set of core competencies in respiratory protection that include reusable respirators as an integral component of new and updated respiratory protection curricula and should ensure that training and education programs, at all levels and across work settings, equip health care workers to meet those competencies;
- Health care employers, managers, and workers—working with CDC, OSHA, the Joint Commission, and professional associations—should champion the importance of respiratory protection programs, especially involving the use of reusable elastomeric respirators, and support the use of new models for building a workplace safety culture, such as the use of practice champions, to normalize the use of respiratory protection;
- CDC, relevant professional associations, health care employers, and clinical leadership should develop appropriate mechanisms, including a network of health care respiratory protection program managers and other leaders, to share best practices in respiratory protection within facilities, across regions, and across the nation, with the goal of ensuring the health and safety of health care workers across all settings, including currently underserved settings (e.g., home health care, some rural facilities, nursing homes).
Ensure Rapid and Seamless Implementation
In examining the use of reusable elastomeric respirators, the committee noted not only the potential benefits that these respirators could bring to the health care field but also the current challenges for implementation, including cleaning, disinfection, and maintenance, and the disparities in preparedness among hospitals. With a focus on public health preparedness and on the health and safety of all health care workers, efforts are needed to improve the adoption and implementation of reusable respirators by reducing the variances and harmonizing the standards and guidelines. Without attention to this issue, facilities may be ill prepared to respond to a respiratory disease pandemic that exhausts respirator supplies and could put the safety of health care workers and the care of patients at risk.
Recommendation 3: Harmonize Standards and Clarify Guidelines and Responsibilities
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, including the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, staff of the Strategic National Stockpile, and state-level regulatory and stockpile entities—in conjunction with manufacturers, standards-setting organizations, health care facilities, health care professional associations, and other relevant stakeholders—should support the harmonization of guidance and operating procedures for the use of elastomeric respirators in the health care setting. To implement this recommendation,
- Standardize and clearly communicate respiratory protection and infection prevention guidance from international, national, state, and local public health authorities in the event of an influenza pandemic or other public health crisis (i.e., who in the health care facility should use respiratory protection and in what circumstances and what level of protection is to be used) for all types of workers in health care facilities;
- Provide clear, practical, and standardized guidance on effective cleaning and disinfection processes for reusable respirators, including harmonizing manufacturers’ recommendations for cleaning and disinfection without damaging the integrity of the device;
- Clarify and broadly communicate the expectations and responsibilities for emergency preparedness stockpiling of respirators among federal, state, and private-sector agencies and entities and provide health care facilities with information as to the makes and models of respirators in stockpiles.
CONCLUDING COMMENTS
Although this report is focused on one type of respiratory protective device—half-facepiece reusable elastomeric respirators—the paramount issues are much broader and center on ensuring the safety and health of health care workers and the continuity of high-quality patient care. Health care has long been acknowledged as a profession with potential dangerous and life-threatening risks. Therefore, there is an ethical imperative to improve and ensure health care worker safety and health.