Evaluation of N95 respirators on fit rate, real-time leakage, and usability among Chinese healthcare workers: study protocol of a randomized crossover trial
Evaluation of N95 respirators on fit rate, real-time leakage, and usability among Chinese healthcare workers: study protocol of a randomized crossover trial
Background: N95 respirators are used to limit the transmission of respiratory viruses in clinical settings. There are two to three major types of N95 available for all healthcare workers in Hong Kong. However, after the coronavirus outbreak and the consequent shortage of many commonly used respirators, several new N95 respirators were adopted temporarily in clinical settings without evaluation. Prior literature indicates that traditional N95 respirators used in hospitals in Hong Kong are not fit for Chinese people and have fit rates ranging from 50 to 60%. This study aims to investigate and compare the fit rate, real-time leakage, and mask usability of traditional and new N95 respirators among Chinese healthcare workers. Methods: This study will employ two sequential phases. Phase 1 has a cross-sectional exploratory design used to investigate the fit rate and mask usability of three types of respirators. Phase 2 will examine the effectiveness of respiratory protection by comparing traditional and new N95 respirators by a randomized crossover trial. Eligible participants will be randomly allocated through a controlled crossover experiment to either a traditional or new respirator group (n = 100 in each arm) for performing standard clinical procedures. The primary outcome (real-time leakage) will be recorded at 30 s intervals during nasopharyngeal suctioning and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The secondary outcomes are the fit rate and mask usability. After a 2 min suctioning (15 s twice) and 4 min one-person CPR, the fit rate (assessed by standard N95 fit testing) and mask usability (measured by self-reported mask usability scale) will be recorded as data of post-procedure. After 10 min rest, measurement of real-time leakage (i.e., crossover), fit test, and usability will be repeated. Discussion: The result of real-time leakage will be a vital indicator of the respiratory protection of Chinese healthcare workers while performing prevalent clinical procedures, such as resuscitation. The fit rate and usability result will serve as an essential reference for consumable purchase policy in clinical settings. Trial registration: ISRCTN registry: ISRCTN40115047. Retrospectively registered on May 9, 2023. https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN40115047.
Chinese healthcare workers, crossover trial, fit rate, N95 respirators, real-time leakage, usability
Lam, Simon Ching
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Odetayo, Aderonke
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Yu, Ignatius Tak Sun
116df660-8d71-407a-aa0a-a9eee85b5089
So, Sony Nai Yeung
40126d5e-1738-4323-93b3-f07cb6b416d0
Cheung, Kin
0ea00a3c-505c-4da0-bfe6-581bdddac5d8
Lee, Paul Hong
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Suen, Lorna Kwai Ping
3927a819-69fb-4681-8d9b-0aad1be7faff
17 November 2023
Lam, Simon Ching
72f4d1ac-b686-4044-ac7d-677205dd25cf
Odetayo, Aderonke
30a0cff9-4afc-42a0-ba01-b60ae8069a81
Yu, Ignatius Tak Sun
116df660-8d71-407a-aa0a-a9eee85b5089
So, Sony Nai Yeung
40126d5e-1738-4323-93b3-f07cb6b416d0
Cheung, Kin
0ea00a3c-505c-4da0-bfe6-581bdddac5d8
Lee, Paul Hong
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Suen, Lorna Kwai Ping
3927a819-69fb-4681-8d9b-0aad1be7faff
Lam, Simon Ching, Odetayo, Aderonke, Yu, Ignatius Tak Sun, So, Sony Nai Yeung, Cheung, Kin, Lee, Paul Hong and Suen, Lorna Kwai Ping
(2023)
Evaluation of N95 respirators on fit rate, real-time leakage, and usability among Chinese healthcare workers: study protocol of a randomized crossover trial.
Frontiers in Public Health, 11, [1266607].
(doi:10.3389/fpubh.2023.1266607).
Abstract
Background: N95 respirators are used to limit the transmission of respiratory viruses in clinical settings. There are two to three major types of N95 available for all healthcare workers in Hong Kong. However, after the coronavirus outbreak and the consequent shortage of many commonly used respirators, several new N95 respirators were adopted temporarily in clinical settings without evaluation. Prior literature indicates that traditional N95 respirators used in hospitals in Hong Kong are not fit for Chinese people and have fit rates ranging from 50 to 60%. This study aims to investigate and compare the fit rate, real-time leakage, and mask usability of traditional and new N95 respirators among Chinese healthcare workers. Methods: This study will employ two sequential phases. Phase 1 has a cross-sectional exploratory design used to investigate the fit rate and mask usability of three types of respirators. Phase 2 will examine the effectiveness of respiratory protection by comparing traditional and new N95 respirators by a randomized crossover trial. Eligible participants will be randomly allocated through a controlled crossover experiment to either a traditional or new respirator group (n = 100 in each arm) for performing standard clinical procedures. The primary outcome (real-time leakage) will be recorded at 30 s intervals during nasopharyngeal suctioning and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The secondary outcomes are the fit rate and mask usability. After a 2 min suctioning (15 s twice) and 4 min one-person CPR, the fit rate (assessed by standard N95 fit testing) and mask usability (measured by self-reported mask usability scale) will be recorded as data of post-procedure. After 10 min rest, measurement of real-time leakage (i.e., crossover), fit test, and usability will be repeated. Discussion: The result of real-time leakage will be a vital indicator of the respiratory protection of Chinese healthcare workers while performing prevalent clinical procedures, such as resuscitation. The fit rate and usability result will serve as an essential reference for consumable purchase policy in clinical settings. Trial registration: ISRCTN registry: ISRCTN40115047. Retrospectively registered on May 9, 2023. https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN40115047.
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fpubh-11-1266607 (1)
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 October 2023
Published date: 17 November 2023
Keywords:
Chinese healthcare workers, crossover trial, fit rate, N95 respirators, real-time leakage, usability
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 493389
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493389
ISSN: 2296-2565
PURE UUID: fdbbd360-af60-490f-9ef9-83ce1b0c4906
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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2024 16:43
Last modified: 03 Sep 2024 02:09
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Author:
Simon Ching Lam
Author:
Aderonke Odetayo
Author:
Ignatius Tak Sun Yu
Author:
Sony Nai Yeung So
Author:
Kin Cheung
Author:
Paul Hong Lee
Author:
Lorna Kwai Ping Suen
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