Ntiforo Corrie A, McDougal April N, DeMaet Mary Ann, Mayer-Diaz Malissa A, Newton Je T'Aime M, Dacso Matthew M
Corrie A. Ntiforo, MSPH, RBP, is an Environmental and Health Safety (EHS) Consultant, Department of Biosafety, Office of the Provost, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX.
April N. McDougal, DO, is Associate Director, Department of Infection Control and Healthcare Epidemiology, and an Assistant Professor, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX.
Health Secur. 2023 Jan-Feb;21(1):11-21. doi: 10.1089/hs.2022.0086. Epub 2023 Jan 24.
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, substantial disruptions in personal protective equipment (PPE) supply chains forced healthcare systems to become resourceful to ensure PPE availability for healthcare workers. Most worrisome was the global shortage of N95 respirators. In response, a collaboration between the Department of Infection Control and Healthcare Epidemiology and the Department of Biosafety at the University of Texas Medical Branch developed a PPE recycling program guaranteeing an adequate supply of respirators for frontline staff. The team successfully developed and implemented a novel workflow that included validated decontamination procedures, education, and training programs as well as transportation, labeling, and storage logistics. In total, 15,995 respirators of various types and sizes were received for recycling. Of these, 12,752 (80%) were recycled. Following the program's implementation, we surveyed 134 frontline healthcare workers who overwhelmingly graded our institution's culture of safety positively. Overall impressions of the N95 respirator recycling program were mixed, although interpretation of those results was limited by a lower survey response rate. In an era of increasing health security threats, innovative recycling programs like this one may serve as a model for other health systems to respond to future PPE supply chain disruptions.
在新冠疫情早期,个人防护装备(PPE)供应链的严重中断迫使医疗系统想尽办法,以确保医护人员有足够的个人防护装备。最令人担忧的是N95口罩的全球短缺。作为回应,德克萨斯大学医学分校感染控制与医疗保健流行病学系和生物安全系合作开展了一项个人防护装备回收计划,以确保一线工作人员有足够的口罩供应。该团队成功开发并实施了一种新颖的工作流程,其中包括经过验证的消毒程序、教育和培训计划,以及运输、标签和存储物流。总共收到了15995个各种类型和尺寸的口罩进行回收。其中,12752个(80%)被回收。在该计划实施后,我们对134名一线医护人员进行了调查,他们对我们机构的安全文化给予了高度评价。尽管调查回复率较低限制了对结果的解读,但对N95口罩回收计划的总体印象喜忧参半。在健康安全威胁日益增加的时代,这样的创新回收计划可能为其他医疗系统应对未来个人防护装备供应链中断提供一个范例。