| Literature DB >> 34294861 |
Samuel Collins1, Natalie Williams2, Felicity Southworth2, Thomas James3, Louise Davidson2, Emily Orchard2, Tim Marczylo4, Richard Amlôt2,5.
Abstract
The Initial Operational Response (IOR) to chemical incidents is a suite of rapid strategies including evacuation, disrobe and improvised and interim decontamination. IOR and Specialist Operational Response (SOR) decontamination protocols involving mass decontamination units would be conducted in sequence by UK emergency services following a chemical incident, to allow for safe onward transfer of casualties. As part of a series of human volunteer studies, we examined for the first time, the effectiveness of UK IOR and SOR decontamination procedures alone and in sequence. Specifically, we evaluated the additional contribution of SOR, when following improvised and interim decontamination. Two simulants, methyl salicylate (MeS) with vegetable oil and benzyl salicylate (BeS), were applied to participants' skin. Participants underwent improvised dry, improvised wet, interim wet, specialist decontamination and a no decontamination control. Skin analysis and UV photography indicated significantly lower levels of both simulants remaining following decontamination compared to controls. There were no significant differences in MeS levels recovered between decontamination conditions. Analysis of BeS, a more persistent simulant than MeS, showed that recovery from skin was significantly reduced following combined IOR with SOR than IOR alone. These results show modest additional benefits of decontamination interventions conducted in sequence, particularly for persistent chemicals, supporting current UK operational procedures.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34294861 PMCID: PMC8298482 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-94644-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Trial design, the design includes 5 conditions: [1] Control, [2] Dry + Interim, [3] RWR + Interim, [4] Dry + Interim + SOR, [5] RWR + Interim + SOR. All participants (n = 11) took part in each stage of the study in random order.
| Intervention | Time from simulant application (min) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | 25 | 60 | |
| 1 | Control | ||
| 2 | Dry | Interim | |
| 3 | RWR | Interim | |
| 4 | Dry | Interim | SOR |
| 5 | RWR | Interim | SOR |
Figure 1A participant undergoing each of the decontamination conditions. (A) Dry decontamination using white roll sheets, (B) RWR using a sponge, bucket and soapy water, (C) interim using a bespoke showering corridor and (D) SOR using an MDU.
Figure 2(A) MeS recovered from skin for each decontamination condition, (B) BeS recovered for each decontamination condition, (C) Total simulant area (spread) and emittance (simulant amount) detected by UV image analysis, (D) Total BeS excreted in urine for baseline, 80 min and 24 h samples. Box and whisker plots show median and inter–quartile range, together with the maximum and minimum values.