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Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)


Need for PPE


Personal protective equipment, or PPE, is designed to provide protection from serious injuries or illnesses resulting from contact with chemical, radiological, physical, electrical, mechanical, or other hazards. Careful selection and use of adequate PPE should protect individuals involved in chemical emergencies from hazards effecting the respiratory system, skin, eyes, face, hands, feet, head, body, and hearing. No single combination of protective equipment and clothing is capable of protecting against all hazards. Thus PPE should be used in conjunction with other protective methods, including exposure control procedures and equipment.


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PPE Selection


The onsite incident commander will define the PPE ensemble required based on the conditions at the scene. For first receivers and hospitals, PPE selection is based on the institution's chemical emergency procedures.

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Levels of PPE


Personal protective equipment is divided into four categories based on the degree of protection afforded.

  • Level A protection should be worn when the highest level of respiratory, skin, eye and mucous membrane protection is needed. A typical Level A ensemble includes:
    • Positive pressure (pressure demand), self contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) (NIOSH approved), or positive-pressure supplied air respirator with escape SCBA.
    • Fully encapsulating chemical protective suit.
    • Gloves, inner, chemical resistant.
    • Gloves, outer, chemical resistant.
    • Boots, chemical resistant, steel toe and shank; (depending on suit boot construction, worn over or under suit boot.)
  • Level B protection should be selected when the highest level of respiratory protection is needed, but a lesser level of skin and eye protection is needed. Level B protection is the minimum level recommended on initial site entries until the hazards have been further identified and defined by monitoring, sampling, and other reliable methods of analysis, and equipment corresponding with those findings utilized. A typical Level B ensemble includes:
    • Positive-pressure (pressure-demand), self-contained breathing apparatus (NIOSH approved), or positive-pressure supplied air respirator with escape SCBA.
    • Chemical resistant clothing (overalls and long-sleeved jacket, coveralls, hooded two-piece chemical splash suit, disposable chemical resistant coveralls.)
    • Gloves, outer, chemical resistant.
    • Gloves, inner, chemical resistant.
    • Boots, outer, chemical resistant, steel toe and shank.
  • Level C protection should be selected when the type of airborne substance is known, concentration measured, criteria for using air-purifying respirators met, and skin and eye exposure is unlikely. Periodic monitoring of the air must be performed. A typical Level C ensemble includes:
    • Full-face or half-mask, air-purifying respirator (NIOSH approved).
    • Chemical resistant clothing (one piece coverall, hooded two piece chemical splash suit, chemical resistant hood and apron, disposable chemical resistant coveralls.)
    • Gloves, outer, chemical resistant.
    • Gloves, inner, chemical resistant.
    • Boots, steel toe and shank, chemical resistant.
  • Level D protection is primarily a work uniform and is used for nuisance contamination only. It requires only coveralls and safety shoes/boots. Other PPE is based upon the situation (types of gloves, etc.). It should not be worn on any site where respiratory or skin hazards exist.

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Types of Protection


There are many types of protective equipment, each with specific applications and use requirements. Information on common elements of the PPE ensemble include:

  • Respiratory
    • Responders should use appropriate respirators to protect against adverse health effects caused by breathing contaminated air.
  • Eye & Face
    • Eye and face protection should protect responders from the hazards of flying fragments, hot sparks, and chemical splashes.
  • Skin
  • Noise
    • Earplugs or earmuffs can help prevent damage to hearing. Exposure to high noise levels can cause irreversible hearing loss or impairment as well as physical and psychological stress.

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Elements of a PPE Management Program


PPE use requires the implementation of a management program. Some elements of an effective program include:

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Limitations of PPE


Decisions about PPE use must consider its limitations.

  • Safety Hazards
    • Restricted movement due to weight
    • Restricted vision due to visual field limitations
    • Difficulty communicating due to face protection
  • Physiological/Psychological stressors
    • Psychological stress resulting from confining nature of full suits
    • Heat stress and risk of dehydration
    • The highest levels of PPE generally cannot be worn continuously for more than 30 minutes
  • Management Requirements
    • Need for a management program that ensures effective use of PPE
      • Facial hair interferes with proper fit of masks
      • Improper use, penetration/tears are potentially hazardous

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Medical Management


Because of the psychological and physiological stresses involved. PPE use requires medical surveillance and clearance.

  • OSHA Medical Clearance Questionnaire (OSHA)
  • Levels of PPE Clearance
    • Level 1 - Escape devices only
    • Level 2 - Air purifying only (with dermal protection)
      • Screening- occupational and medical history, vital signs including (BP), EKG, PE of cardio/pulmonary systems, spirometry, hearing and vision screening
    • Level 3 - Full spectrum of PPE
      • Screening - Level 2 evaluation plus Exercise tolerance test (dependent upon and CV evaluation)
  • Medical Monitoring for use scenarios
    • Pre-entry
      • Record weight, vital signs
      • Record recent medical history
      • Compare to individuals baseline information per institution policy
      • Report any concerns to physician
      • Place identification tape with name and role on the back of the responder
      • Complete safety check by a second person
      • Record the starting time PPE is put on
    • During the event
      • Monitor staff time in PPE
      • Have second team preparing to relieve first team in PPE
    • Post-entry
      • Decontamination
      • Record amount of time in PPE (general guideline is 30 minutes)
      • Record weight, vital signs
      • Ensure hydration

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References

  1. Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management. Personal Protection Equipment (PDF - 96 KB) (Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management)
  2. Fact Sheet: Personal Protection Equipment (PDF - 52 KB) (OSHA, 2006)
  3. Personal Protective Equipment (OSHA)
  4. Safety and Health Topics: Personal Protection Equipment (OSHA)
Additional Resources
  1. Personal Protective Equipment (OSHA)
  2. U.S. Department of Transportation. Emergency Response Guidebook (ERG) (DOT)
  3. Additional resources from CDC/NIOSH:
Additional PPE Information from Radiation Emergency Medical Management (REMM)
  1. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Classification Systems
  2. PPE Image Gallery: Respiratory Protective Equipment - Civilian
  3. PPE Image Gallery: Dermal Protective Equipment - Civilian
  4. PPE Image Gallery: Respiratory Protective Equipment - Military
  5. PPE Image Gallery: Dermal Protective Equipment - Military

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