FDA COVID-19 Ruling: Not All N95 Respirators Eligible for Decontamination and Reuse
Decontaminated respirators should only be resorted to when unused devices are not available, but that happened a lot in the last few months.
This perhaps might make infection preventionists and other healthcare professionals breathe a little easier; federal health officials placed further restrictions on exactly which N95 respirators can be decontaminated and reused. Decontamination works for some of the devices, but not all, says the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in an
The EUA represents one more attempt to better regulated the use and decontamination of the devices. A host of issues raised about respirators go beyond the much-reported on and decried
“While we continue to support efforts to meet the urgent need for respirators, we are also doing everything in our authority to ensure health care personnel are adequately protected,” Anand Shah, MD, FDA deputy commissioner for medical and scientific affairs said in the EUA. “As part of those efforts, we are announcing that we have revised and reissued a number of EUAs to amend which respirators are authorized to be decontaminated.”
The EUA, “Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Reissues Emergency Use Authorizations Revising Which Types of Respirators Can Be Decontaminated for Reuse,” states that NIOSH
The decontamination of respirators is an issue that cropped up as a result of the shortage of N95s that the surge in COVID-19 patients so starkly highlighted. Decontaminated respirators should only be resorted to when unused devices are not available, but that happened a lot in the last few months. And such decontamination should only apply to FDA-cleared N95s, and NIOSH-approved N95s.
“The decontamination systems are only authorized to decontaminate non-cellulose compatible N95 respirators,” the EUA states. “As such, health care personnel should not reuse a respirator that is incompatible with an authorized decontamination system but has nonetheless been decontaminated. Users of any respirator (whether or not decontaminated) should always assess for proper fit after placement. Respirators with poor fit, visible soiling, or damage should not be used.”
The FDA also revised EUAs for
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