Major Article
Availability and crisis standards of care for personal protective equipment during fall 2020 of the COVID-19 pandemic: A national study by the APIC COVID-19 task force

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2021.03.015Get rights and content

Highlights

  • A quarter lacked sufficient disinfection supplies, N95s, isolation gowns, and gloves.

  • 10 – 20% lacked eye protection and hand hygiene supplies.

  • Significantly more were reusing respirators than masks (65.6% vs 46.8% respectively).

  • A third were re-using isolation gowns.

  • About half were decontaminating respirators.

Abstract

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in personal protective equipment (PPE) shortages in spring 2020, necessitating crisis protocols.

Methods

An online survey was administered to all Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology members in October, 2020 to assess PPE availability and crisis standards utilized in fall, 2020.

Results

In total, 1,081 infection preventionists participated. A quarter lacked sufficient disinfection supplies, N95s, isolation gowns, and gloves; 10%-20% lacked eye protection and hand hygiene supplies. Significantly more were reusing respirators than masks (65.6% vs 46.8%, respectively; P < .001); a third (32.0%, n = 735) were reusing isolation gowns. About half (45.9%, n = 496) were decontaminating respirators. Determinants of believing current PPE reuse protocols were safe and evidence-based included the infection preventionists being involved in developing COVID-19 protocols (both), having respirator reuse protocols that involve ≤ 5 reuses (both), using reusable respiratory protection (both), decontaminating respirators (perceived safe), and not reusing masks (perceived safe; P < .05 for all).

Conclusions

Although most health care facilities had adequate PPE in fall 2020, PPE supply chains were still disrupted, resulting in the need to reuse or decontaminate PPE. Ongoing gaps in PPE access need to be addressed in order to minimize health care associated infections and occupational illness.

Key Words

SARS-CoV-2
Surge capacity
Pandemic

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Conflicts of interest: None to report.

Funding: None to report.

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