Respirators versus Surgical Masks |
In these times of the Corona pandemic, one of the foremost strategies are to protect medical professionals from getting infected by patients. One can achieve it by consistent use of respirators that block the infectious particles and viruses, thereby reducing respiratory infections.
In a healthcare environment, N95 filtering
facepiece respirators (FFRs) and surgical masks are the two most commonly used
devices. As there is a shortage of N95 respirators now, it becomes imperative
to understand the difference between surgical masks and the N95 respirators to
have access to proper protection.
FFRs are designed to protect the
healthcare professional and surgical masks are designed for patient
N95 respirators |
Surgical masks |
On the contrary, surgical masks have not been
designed to protect the wearer from airborne hazards. At best, they can only
limit the spread of infectious particles expelled by the wearer. Surgical masks
can protect a sterile area surrounding a surgical incision from contamination
by particles expelled by the wearer that can be in the form of sneezes or coughs.
Surgical masks act as a physical barrier to protect the wearer from sprays,
splashes, or contact with contaminated hands. Surgical masks are not governed
by stringent conditions on minimum filtration efficiency and they are loose
fitting in nature.
N95 respirators offer greater
protection than surgical masks if worn properly - Scientific studies
The current COVID-19 pandemic has restarted the debate on which device should be the minimum level protection in the healthcare facilities - N95 FFRs or surgical masks. One should keep this fact in mind that respirators have been designed so as to reduce the wearer’s exposure to airborne particles. Respirators do not make any claims with respect to disease prevention. Properly fitted and worn N95 masks have a minimum filtration efficiency of 95%. Greater protection against aerosols is achieved by FFRs in comparison with surgical masks in the laboratory studies, however, the clinical studies have been inconclusive.
Thus during the time of crisis and mask shortage, it becomes very important to prioritize the distribution of N95 masks and limit their usage for protection against aerosols. Once the shortage ceases and the supply chain is back to normal, facilities with a respiratory protection program must follow the CDC and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) guidelines. These guidelines and procedures have been described in detail in the Hospital Respiratory Protection Program Toolkit.
surgical masks v/s N95 respirators |
There have been discussions on the comparative the ability of respirators against surgical masks to protect medical professionals against influenza virus that was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association’s article, “N95 Respirators versus Medical Masks for Preventing Influenza Among Health Care Personnel: A Randomized Clinical Trial (ResPECT)”. No significant difference was reported, when a number of incidence of laboratory-confirmed influenza was compared among outpatient health care personnel, participants on trial with surgical masks v/s N95 respirators. ResPECT was conducted at a randomly selected 137 outpatient study sites at seven U.S. medical centers between September 2011 and May 2015, followed by a final follow-up in June 2016. The aim of ResPECT was to measure the effectiveness of an intervention under routine clinical conditions. One limitation of the study was that although the FDA has cleared 500 N95 FFR models and 200 surgical masks, ResPECT studied only two N95 respirators and medical mask models. It would not be correct to generalize about the protectiveness of other models on the basis of these two models. Due to the absence of performance requirements for surgical masks regarding environmental aerosol filtration capability and no requirement of fit testing, less than 1% of surgical masks were cleared by the FDA.
Personal protective equipment
worn inconsistently by healthcare professionals reduces protection
There has been a constant debate over the use of respirators versus surgical masks by healthcare professionals. The main bone of contention in this debate is that the PPEs including the respiratory protection cannot protect the users effectively if they are not used consistently in a proper manner.
Healthcare professionals have been reported to be
inconsistently using personal protective equipment, substantially leading to
reduced protection. More than 12 observational studies have proved that
healthcare professionals are not using protective equipment frequently and are
not removing the respirators correctly. They have been seen to take off their
respirators when they should be wearing them or have been observed not to wear
them at all when required.
Authors conducting trials in ResPECT found that
only 35% of medical professionals either never used surgical masks or
respirators or used sometimes. This led to the conclusion that this incomplete
adherence to the use of surgical masks or respirators had caused unprotected
exposures, thereby leading to an increase in the probability of discovering no
differences.
Adherence to infection control
can be increased with observation, metrics, training, and reinforcing safety
culture
The ResPECT study conducted among healthcare professionals could not definitively prove whether there was any practical difference in the protection provided by surgical masks v/s N95 respirators. However, the study emphasized an important opportunity for prevention. This was the enhancement of the safety culture, which would improve adherence to infection control recommendations.
One must realize that understanding and addressing the core reasons for non-compliance will go a long way to improve the safety culture. The compliance of proper PPE usage improves depending on the level of health risk the worker perceives, such as exposure to influenza v/s tuberculosis (TB) or the Ebola virus. Hence, to ensure consistent compliance, a safety culture emphasizing daily worker safety and training must be established. The behavior leading to non-compliance can be corrected with training, making observations, collecting metrics, and reinforcing the safety culture. The Hospital Respiratory Protection Program Toolkit issued by NIOSH details this belief that routine compliance increases preparedness during a public health emergency.
Healthcare professionals will have to follow the two main steps when they are formulating and implementing respiratory protection program policies. Firstly, they have to be aware of the best practices and secondly, strike the right balance between their own safety and factors associated with patient care.
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