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| Standard Number: | 1910.134; 1910.134(d); 1910.134(f) |
February 5, 1996 Jeni Boyer, RRT Clinical Education Coordinator Respiratory Care, South Unit St. Elizabeth Medical Center One Medical Village Drive Edgewood, Kentucky 41017 Dear Ms. Boyer: This letter is in response to your request for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's (OSHA) interpretation of respiratory protection requirements with regards to tuberculosis (TB) exposure. Under the new respirator certification and testing guidelines issued by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), several new categories of particulate respirators are now available on the market. These include the Type 100, the Type 99, and the Type 95. According to the NIOSH certification document, all three classes of these respirators are acceptable for use during workplace tuberculosis exposure. The Type 95 is regarded as the minimally acceptable level of respiratory protection. OSHA will still accept the use of the high efficiency particulate air (HEPA) respirator or any of these newly certified respirator classes. There are several questions on the use of respirators that continue to be asked. These include use limitations of disposable respirators and fit testing and fit checking requirements for respirator fit. Regarding the reuse of disposable respirators, NIOSH has stated that the disposable masks can be reused for multiple uses provided the integrity of the mask has not been compromised. OSHA accepts this view. On fit checking and fit testing, our standards require that each worker assigned to wear a respirator must receive either a qualitative or quantitative fit test. Once assigned a respirator, each employee must perform a fit check of the mask every time the respirator is put on. The purpose of the fit check is to assure that the respirator is properly situated on the face and is providing a face to respirator seal comparable to when the mask was fit tested. [This document was edited on 3/24/1999 to strike information that no longer reflects current OSHA policy.] The last point raised in your correspondence addresses the assigned protection factor (APF) of the N-95 respirators. When a quantitative fit test is conducted, the wearer of the mask is assigned a fit factor that is based upon the APF plus a safety factor of 10. The combination of the APF and the safety factor is the derivation of the fit factor (100). OSHA has not assigned a protection factor to these masks. [This document was edited on 3/24/1999 to strike information that no longer reflects current OSHA policy.] Your interest in occupational health and safety is appreciated. If you have any further questions please contact [the Office of Health Enforcement at (202) 693-2190]. Sincerely, John B. Miles, Jr., Director [Directorate of Enforcement Programs] [Corrected 10/22/2004] |
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