| Literature DB >> 26554291 |
Delbert A Harnish1, Brian K Heimbuch1, Charles Balzli2, Melanie Choe3, April E Lumley2, Ronald E Shaffer4, Joseph D Wander5.
Abstract
Nosocomial infections pose an escalating threat to both patients and healthcare workers (HCWs). A widely recommended device for individual respiratory protection, the N95 filtering facepiece respirator (FFR) has been shown to provide efficient filtration of inert particles larger and smaller than the nominal most-penetrating particle size (MPPS) range, 0.03-0.3 μm. Humans generate respiratory aerosols in the MPPS range, suggesting that short-range disease transmission could occur via small infectious particles. Data presented here show that the N95 FFR will afford a significant measure of protection against infectious particles as small as a bare H1N1 influenza virion, and that the capture mechanism does not discriminate in favor of, or against, biological particles.Entities:
Keywords: Bioaerosol; H1N1; N95 respirator; disease transmission; infection; respiratory
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26554291 DOI: 10.1080/15459624.2015.1116698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Environ Hyg ISSN: 1545-9624 Impact factor: 2.155