| Literature DB >> 32255535 |
J S Abramowicz1, J M Basseal2, C Brezinka3, A Dall'Asta4, J Deng5, G Harrison6, J C S Lee7, A Lim8, K Maršal9, P Miloro10, L C Poon11, K Å Salvesen12, R Sande13, G Ter Haar14, S C Westerway15, M X Xie16, C Lees17.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32255535 PMCID: PMC7262197 DOI: 10.1002/uog.22035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol ISSN: 0960-7692 Impact factor: 8.678
Personal protective equipment (PPE) recommended for use by ultrasound providers based on risk assessment of patient for COVID‐19
| PPE | Asymptomatic and TOCC negative | Asymptomatic and TOCC positive | Suspected |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clothing | Dedicated work clothes | Dedicated work clothes | Dedicated work clothes |
| Hand hygiene | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Surgical facemask | Yes | Respirator (N95, FFP2/3) | Respirator (N95, FFP2/3) |
| Respirator | No | Yes (N95, FFP2/3) | Yes (N95, FFP2/3) |
| Isolation gown | No | Disposable fluid‐resistant and impermeable protective gown (e.g. AAMI level 3) | Disposable fluid‐resistant and impermeable protective gown (e.g. AAMI level 3) |
| Disposable gloves | Yes | Yes (two pairs) | Yes (two pairs) |
| Eye protection | No | Goggles or face shield | Goggles or face shield |
| Hair cover | No | Yes | Yes |
| Additional consideration for transvaginal scan or invasive procedures | Standard condom or commercial transducer cover | Standard condom or commercial transducer cover; cover for cable if available | Standard condom or commercial transducer cover; cover for cable if available |
| Staffing/environment | — | — | Ideally scan at bedside rather than in a clinic; minimize number of staff in room and ensure that most senior person is undertaking scan |
| Disinfection/cleaning | Low‐level disinfection for external probes; high‐level disinfection for internal probes | Low‐level disinfection for external probes; high‐level disinfection for internal probes; additional low‐level disinfection for ultrasound machine and cables | Low‐level disinfection for external probes; high‐level disinfection for internal probes; additional low‐level disinfection for ultrasound machine and cables |
Symptomatic patient with or without travel, occupation, contact and cluster (TOCC) risk factors, in area in which there is widespread community transmission.
Extended use of surgical facemasks is practice of wearing same surgical facemask for repeat close‐contact encounters with several different patients, without removing facemask between patients.
In most cases, one facemask can be safely used for a typical clinic of 3–4 h.
Surgical facemask should be removed and discarded if it is soiled, damaged or hard to breathe through.
Healthcare workers should take care not to touch their surgical facemask; if they touch or adjust their surgical facemask, they should immediately perform hand hygiene.
Healthcare workers should leave patient care area if they need to remove their surgical facemask.
Re‐use should be implemented according to CDC guidance27.
All healthcare workers should undergo training on appropriate use of and fit testing for respirators.
Alternatives to respirators: filtering facepiece respirator, elastomeric half‐mask and full facepiece air purifying respirator, if available; all these alternatives provide equivalent or higher protection than N95 respirators when worn properly.
Extended use refers to practice of wearing same N95 respirator for repeat close‐contact encounters with several different patients, without removing respirator between patient encounters.
Extended use of respirators is well‐suited to situations in which multiple patients with COVID‐19, whose care requires use of respirator, are cohorted (e.g. housed in same hospital unit).
Limited re‐use of N95 respirators when caring for patients with COVID‐19 might become necessary.
However, it is unknown what is the potential contribution of contact transmission for SARS‐CoV‐2, therefore, caution should be exercised.
Re‐use should be implemented according to CDC guidance28.
Recommendation: When putting on new mask/respirator, even if it is type, size and shape that fitted last time, recheck sealability, not only in neutral head position, but also in positions taken when actually scanning a patient, for example, by turning head to side or tilting chin up to face monitor, or during use of two hands to hold transducer or other device.