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Personal protective equipment and antiviral drug use during hospitalization for suspected avian or pandemic influenza

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journal contribution
posted on 2007-10-01, 00:00 authored by A Swaminathan, R Martin, S Gamon, C Aboltins, Eugene AthanEugene Athan, G Braitberg, M G Catton, L Cooley, D E Dwyer, D Edmonds, D P Eisen, K Hosking, Andrew HughesAndrew Hughes, P D Johnson, A V Maclean, M O'Reilly, S E Peters, R L Stuart, R Moran, M L Grayson
For pandemic influenza planning, realistic estimates of personal protective equipment (PPE) and antiviral medication required for hospital healthcare workers (HCWs) are vital. In this simulation study, a patient with suspected avian or pandemic influenza (API) sought treatment at 9 Australian hospital emergency departments where patient-staff interactions during the first 6 hours of hospitalization were observed. Based on World Health Organization definitions and guidelines, the mean number of "close contacts" of the API patient was 12.3 (range 6-17; 85% HCWs); mean "exposures" were 19.3 (range 15-26). Overall, 20-25 PPE sets were required per patient, with variable HCW compliance for wearing these items (93% N95 masks, 77% gowns, 83% gloves, and 73% eye protection). Up to 41% of HCW close contacts would have qualified for postexposure antiviral prophylaxis. These data indicate that many current national stockpiles of PPE and antiviral medication are likely inadequate for a pandemic.

History

Journal

Emerging infectious diseases

Volume

13

Issue

10

Pagination

1541 - 1547

Publisher

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services * Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Location

Atlanta, Ga.

ISSN

1080-6040

eISSN

1080-6059

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, The Authors