a School of Public Health , Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
J Occup Environ Hyg. 2018 Dec;15(12):803-809. doi: 10.1080/15459624.2018.1515490.
An annual OSHA fit test is required for all U.S. employees required to wear a respirator during work, but there are limited data demonstrating a link between fit test results and respirator fit during work. The goal of this research is to determine if the fit factor (FF) achieved during an abbreviated ambient aerosol condensation particle counter (CPC) quantitative fit test is predictive of fit achieved during a simulated workplace protection factor (SWPF) scenario that includes realistic healthcare activities. Fifteen subjects (7 male; 8 female) were recruited for a range of facial sizes. Each subject donned an N95 filtering facepiece respirator and performed a single 29-min routine consisting of initial and final 2.5 min fast fit tests (five 30-sec exercises: normal breathing, head side to side, head up and down, talking, and bending over) and three repetitions of three 6-min simulated healthcare activities (CPR, ultrasound, and making a hospital bed). Two CPC instruments simultaneously collected second-by-second measures of particle concentration inside and outside of the respirator facepiece. FFs or SWPFs were calculated by dividing outside by inside facepiece concentrations. Overall FFs and SWPFs were highly correlated. Each exercise FF was highly correlated with the overall SWPF. Normal breathing, head up and down, and talking were most predictive of overall SWPF. Normal breathing and talking together were predictive of each of the three simulated healthcare activities. For CPR and bed making activities, head movement exercises were also found to be predictive. A quantitative fit test using a small set of exercises is highly predictive of an individual's fit during simulated work activities. Some exercises (e.g., talking and head movements) are predictive of fit during simulated workplace activities. Limitations include only one respirator model, a small subject pool not representative of the full range of face sizes. This article uses an innovative second-by-second assessment method that collects information about in- and outside-facepiece concentrations throughout the test period.
所有在美国工作时需要佩戴呼吸器的员工都需要进行年度职业安全与健康管理局(OSHA) fit test,但目前仅有有限的数据表明 fit test 结果与工作时呼吸器的适配度之间存在关联。本研究旨在确定在简短的环境气溶胶冷凝粒子计数器(CPC)定量 fit test 中获得的 fit 因子(FF)是否可预测包括真实医疗保健活动在内的模拟工作场所保护因子(SWPF)场景中获得的 fit。招募了 15 名(7 名男性;8 名女性)不同脸型的受试者。每位受试者都佩戴了 N95 过滤式面罩呼吸器,并进行了一次 29 分钟的常规测试,其中包括最初和最后的 2.5 分钟快速 fit test(5 个 30 秒的练习:正常呼吸、左右转头、上下抬头、说话和弯腰)以及三次模拟医疗保健活动(CPR、超声和铺病床)的重复。两个 CPC 仪器同时实时采集呼吸器面罩内外的粒子浓度。FF 或 SWPF 是通过将外部浓度除以内部浓度来计算的。整体 FF 和 SWPF 高度相关。每个练习的 FF 与整体 SWPF 高度相关。正常呼吸、抬头和说话最能预测整体 SWPF。正常呼吸和说话一起可以预测三种模拟医疗保健活动中的每一种。对于 CPR 和铺床活动,头部运动练习也被证明是有预测性的。使用少量练习的定量 fit test 高度预测了个体在模拟工作活动中的 fit。一些练习(例如说话和头部运动)可预测模拟工作场所活动中的 fit。局限性包括仅使用了一种呼吸器模型,研究对象数量较少,无法代表所有脸型。本文使用了一种创新的逐秒评估方法,可在整个测试期间收集有关内外面罩浓度的信息。