The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and HealthAdministration (OSHA) issued a final rule Sept.
25 that provides employers with two new fit testing protocols for ensuring that
employees’ respirators fit properly.
The new protocols are the modified ambient aerosol condensation
nuclei counter (CNC) quantitative fit testing protocol for full-facepiece and half-mask
elastomeric respirators, and the modified ambient aerosol CNC quantitative fit
testing protocol for filtering facepiece respirators. Both protocols are
variations of the original OSHA-approved ambient aerosol CNC protocol, but have
fewer test exercises, shorter exercise duration, and a more streamlined
sampling sequence.
These two quantitative methods add to the four existing in Appendix A of OSHA’s Respiratory Protection Standard, which contains mandatory respirator fit-testing
protocols that employers must choose from to protect employees from hazardous
airborne contaminants. The rule does not require employers in general
industries, shipyard employment and construction to update or replace their
current fit testing methods and does not impose additional costs.
The rule took effect Sept. 26.
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