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V.   NIOSH Recommendations for Personal Respiratory Protection
41

Table 3 (continued)—NIOSH Recommendations for Minimal Acceptable Personal Respiratory Protection for Health-Care-Facility Workers Potentially Exposed to Tuberculosis


Potential for
Aerosolization
of Droplet
Nuclei
Locations and Procedures Where
Confirmed or Potential Tuberculosis
Transmitters Are Present
or Potentially Present (see note 1)
Minimal Acceptable
Personal Respiratory
Protection
High
Administration of aerosolized pentamidine
   (and other aerosols)
Any cough-inducing procedure
Autopsy rooms, aerosol-generating
   procedures (e.g., irrigating, sawing)
Bronchoscopy procedures
Endotracheal intubation/suctioning
   procedures
Sputum induction
POSITIVE PRESSURE,
AIRLINE, HALFMASK
RESPIRATORS USED IN
CONJUNCTION WITH AN
EFFECTIVE RESPIRATORY
PROTECTION PROGRAM
Medium
AFB isolation rooms
Intensive-care units, routine procedures
Laboratories (see note 2)
Non-cough-inducting procedures
Operating rooms
POWERED,
HEPA-FILTER, HALFMASK
RESPIRATORS USED IN
CONJUNCTION WITH AN
EFFECTIVE RESPIRATORY
PROTECTION PROGRAM
Indeterminant
(see note 3)
Admitting areas
Emergency rooms (including waiting areas)
Hallways
Transport of patients
Waiting areas (inpatient and outpatient)
POSSIBILITY OF EXPOSURE

POWERED,
HEPA-FILTER, HALFMASK
RESPIRATORS USED IN
CONJUNCTION WITH AN
EFFECTIVE RESPIRATORY
PROTECTION PROGRAM

NO POSSIBILITY
OF EXPOSURE

NO RESPIRATOR NEEDED

Note 1—As identified with an Admission Screening Plan as discussed in section V.B starting on page 37.
Note 2—Respirators are not indicated when effective infectious-source controls are in use such as given in (44).
Note 3—Whether or not there is a risk depends on whether or not there is a possibility of exposure to a person with infectious tuberculosis.