| Literature DB >> 27171285 |
Peter A Jaques1, Pengfei Gao2, Selcen Kilinc-Balci2, Lee Portnoff2, Robyn Weible1, Matthew Horvatin1, Amanda Strauch2, Ronald Shaffer2.
Abstract
Gowns and coveralls are important components of protective ensembles used during the management of known or suspected Ebola patients. In this study, an Elbow Lean Test was used to obtain a visual semi-quantitative measure of the resistance of medical protective garments to the penetration of two bodily fluid simulants. Tests were done on swatches of continuous and discontinuous regions of fabrics cut from five gowns and four coveralls at multiple elbow pressure levels (2-44 PSI). Swatches cut from the continuous regions of one gown and two coveralls did not have any strike-through. For discontinuous regions, only the same gown consistently resisted fluid strike-through. As hypothesized, with the exception of one garment, fluid strike-through increased with higher applied elbow pressure, was higher for lower fluid surface tension, and was higher for the discontinuous regions of the protective garments.Entities:
Keywords: Ebola; Elbow Lean Test; medical garment; strike-through; synthetic blood
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27171285 DOI: 10.1080/15459624.2016.1186279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Environ Hyg ISSN: 1545-9624 Impact factor: 2.155