16 results on '"Kenneth R. Mead"'
Search Results
2. Efficacy of Ventilation, HEPA Air Cleaners, Universal Masking, and Physical Distancing for Reducing Exposure to Simulated Exhaled Aerosols in a Meeting Room
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Jayme P. Coyle, Raymond C. Derk, William G. Lindsley, Francoise M. Blachere, Theresa Boots, Angela R. Lemons, Stephen B. Martin, Kenneth R. Mead, Steven A. Fotta, Jeffrey S. Reynolds, Walter G. McKinney, Erik W. Sinsel, Donald H. Beezhold, and John D. Noti
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Inhalation Exposure ,indoor exposure ,SARS-CoV-2 ,ventilation ,Physical Distancing ,universal masking ,physical distancing ,HEPA air cleaner ,Masks ,COVID-19 ,Respiratory Aerosols and Droplets ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Article ,Infectious Diseases ,Virology ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Humans ,Air Conditioning - Abstract
There is strong evidence associating the indoor environment with transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. SARS-CoV-2 can spread by exposure to droplets and very fine aerosol particles from respiratory fluids that are released by infected persons. Layered mitigation strategies, including but not limited to maintaining physical distancing, adequate ventilation, universal masking, avoiding overcrowding, and vaccination, have shown to be effective in reducing the spread of SARS-CoV-2 within the indoor environment. Here, we examine the effect of mitigation strategies on reducing the risk of exposure to simulated respiratory aerosol particles within a classroom-style meeting room. To quantify exposure of uninfected individuals (Recipients), surrogate respiratory aerosol particles were generated by a breathing simulator with a headform (Source) that mimicked breath exhalations. Recipients, represented by three breathing simulators with manikin headforms, were placed in a meeting room and affixed with optical particle counters to measure 0.3–3 µm aerosol particles. Universal masking of all breathing simulators with a 3-ply cotton mask reduced aerosol exposure by 50% or more compared to scenarios with simulators unmasked. While evaluating the effect of Source placement, Recipients had the highest exposure at 0.9 m in a face-to-face orientation. Ventilation reduced exposure by approximately 5% per unit increase in air change per hour (ACH), irrespective of whether increases in ACH were by the HVAC system or portable HEPA air cleaners. The results demonstrate that mitigation strategies, such as universal masking and increasing ventilation, reduce personal exposure to respiratory aerosols within a meeting room. While universal masking remains a key component of a layered mitigation strategy of exposure reduction, increasing ventilation via system HVAC or portable HEPA air cleaners further reduces exposure.
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- 2021
3. Aerosol agitation: Quantifying the hydrodynamic stressors on particulates encapsulated in small droplets
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James Bird, Kenneth R. Mead, and Oliver McRae
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,fungi ,Computational Mechanics ,food and beverages ,respiratory system ,Particulates ,complex mixtures ,Article ,Aerosol ,03 medical and health sciences ,Modeling and Simulation ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental science ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Aerosolization ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Lower respiratory tract infections originate from multiple aerosol sources, varying from droplets erupting from bursting bubbles in a toilet or those produced by human speech. A key component of the aerosol-based infection pathway—from source to potential host—is the survival of the pathogen during aerosolization. Due to their finite-time instability, pinch-off processes occurring during aerosolization have the potential to rapidly accelerate the fluid into focused regions of these droplets, stress objects therein, and if powerful enough, disrupt biological life. However, the extent that a pathogen will be exposed to damaging hydrodynamic stressors during the aerosolization process is unknown. Here we compute the probability that particulates will be exposed to a hydrodynamic stressor during the generation of droplets that range in size from one to 100 microns. For example, particulates in water droplets less than 5 μm have a 50% chance of being subjected to an energy dissipation rate in excess of 10(11) W/m(3), hydrodynamic stresses in excess of 10(4) Pa, and strain rates in excess of 10(7) s(−1), values known to damage certain biological cells. Using a combination of numerical simulations and self-similar dynamics, we show how the exposure within a droplet can be generally predicted from its size, surface tension, and density, even across different aerosolization mechanisms. Collectively, these results introduce aerosol agitation as a potential factor in pathogen transmission and implicate the pinch-off singularity flow as setting the distribution of hydrodynamic stressors experienced within the droplet.
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- 2021
4. COVID-19 and the Workplace: Research Questions for the Aerosol Science Community
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Edward M. Fisher, Kenneth R. Mead, Stephen B. Martin, Melissa Seaton, Cheryl Fairfield Estill, John D. Noti, Brian Christensen, Francoise M. Blachere, William G. Lindsley, and Nancy Clark Burton
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Transmission (medicine) ,viruses ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,virus diseases ,respiratory system ,010501 environmental sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Virology ,Pollution ,Virus ,Article ,Geography ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Research questions ,General Materials Science ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Coronavirus - Abstract
The global Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) pandemic caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus has raised many urgent questions about the transmission of this disease, including the possible roles of aerosols c...
- Published
- 2020
5. Evaluation of a Dust Control for a Small Slab-Riding Dowel Drill for Concrete Pavement
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Alan Echt and Kenneth R. Mead
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education ,Airflow ,Air Pollutants, Occupational ,Dowel ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Settling ,law ,Occupational Exposure ,Dust collector ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Geotechnical engineering ,Duct (flow) ,Composite material ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Inhalation Exposure ,Drill ,Construction Materials ,Construction Industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Drilling ,Dust ,Quartz ,General Medicine ,Silicon Dioxide ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Ventilation ,Slab ,Environmental science ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Purpose To assess the effectiveness of local exhaust ventilation to control respirable crystalline silica exposures to acceptable levels during concrete dowel drilling. Approach Personal breathing zone samples for respirable dust and crystalline silica were collected while laborers drilled holes 3.5 cm diameter by 36 cm deep in a concrete slab using a single-drill slab-riding dowel drill equipped with local exhaust ventilation. Data were collected on air flow, weather, and productivity. Results All respirable dust samples were below the 90 µg detection limit which, when combined with the largest sample volume, resulted in a minimum detectable concentration of 0.31 mg m(-3). This occurred in a 32-min sample collected when 27 holes were drilled. Quartz was only detected in one air sample; 0.09 mg m(-3) of quartz was found on an 8-min sample collected during a drill maintenance task. The minimum detectable concentration for quartz in personal air samples collected while drilling was performed was 0.02 mg m(-3). The average number of holes drilled during each drilling sample was 23. Over the course of the 2-day study, air flow measured at the dust collector decreased from 2.2 to 1.7 m(3) s(-1). Conclusions The dust control performed well under the conditions of this test. The initial duct velocity with a clean filter was sufficient to prevent settling, but gradually fell below the recommended value to prevent dust from settling in the duct. The practice of raising the drill between each hole may have prevented the dust from settling in the duct. A slightly higher flow rate and an improved duct design would prevent settling without regard to the position of the drill.
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- 2016
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6. Persistence of Bowl Water Contamination during Sequential Flushes of Contaminated Toilets
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David L, Johnson, Robert A, Lynch, Stephanie M, Villanella, Jacob F, Jones, Haiqin, Fang, Kenneth R, Mead, and Deborah V L, Hirst
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digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Article - Abstract
Toilets contaminated with infectious organisms are a recognized contact disease transmission hazard. Previous studies indicate that toilet bowl water can remain contaminated for several flushes after the contamination occurs. This study characterized contamination persistence over an extended series of flushes using both indicator particles and viable bacteria. For this study, toilets were seeded with microbe-size microbial surrogates and with Pseudomonas fluorescens or Clostridium difficile bacteria and flushed up to 24 times. Bowl water samples collected after seeding and after each flush indicated the clearance per flush and residual bowl water contaminant concentration. Toilets exhibited 3 + log10 contaminant reductions with the first flush, only 1–2 logs with the second flush, and less than 1 log thereafter. Contamination still was present 24 flushes post contamination. Clearance was modeled accurately by a two-stage exponential decay process. This study shows that toilet bowl water will remain contaminated many flushes after initial contamination, posing a risk of recurring environmental contamination and associated infection incidence.
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- 2018
7. Effects of Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation (UVGI) on N95 Respirator Filtration Performance and Structural Integrity
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Stephen B. Martin, William G. Lindsley, Kenneth R. Mead, Khachatur Sarkisian, John D. Noti, Robert E. Thewlis, and Julian Nwoko
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Flow resistance ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional ,business.product_category ,Ultraviolet Rays ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental engineering ,Ultraviolet germicidal irradiation ,Structural integrity ,Article ,Breaking strength ,law.invention ,Disinfection ,law ,Particle penetration ,Materials Testing ,Equipment Reuse ,Medicine ,Respiratory Protective Devices ,Respirator ,business ,Filtration ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
The ability to disinfect and reuse disposable N95 filtering facepiece respirators (FFRs) may be needed during a pandemic of an infectious respiratory disease such as influenza. Ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI) is one possible method for respirator disinfection. However, UV radiation degrades polymers, which presents the possibility that UVGI exposure could degrade the ability of a disposable respirator to protect the worker. To study this, we exposed both sides of material coupons and respirator straps from four models of N95 FFRs to UVGI doses from 120-950 J/cm(2). We then tested the particle penetration, flow resistance, and bursting strengths of the individual respirator coupon layers, and the breaking strength of the respirator straps. We found that UVGI exposure led to a small increase in particle penetration (up to 1.25%) and had little effect on the flow resistance. UVGI exposure had a more pronounced effect on the strengths of the respirator materials. At the higher UVGI doses, the strength of the layers of respirator material was substantially reduced (in some cases, by90%). The changes in the strengths of the respirator materials varied considerably among the different models of respirators. UVGI had less of an effect on the respirator straps; a dose of 2360 J/cm(2) reduced the breaking strength of the straps by 20-51%. Our results suggest that UVGI could be used to effectively disinfect disposable respirators for reuse, but the maximum number of disinfection cycles will be limited by the respirator model and the UVGI dose required to inactivate the pathogen.
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- 2015
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8. Assessing Effectiveness of Ceiling-Ventilated Mock Airborne Infection Isolation Room in Preventing Hospital-Acquired Influenza Transmission to Health Care Workers
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Deepthi Sharan, Thatiparti, Urmila, Ghia, and Kenneth R, Mead
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virus diseases ,Article ,respiratory tract diseases - Abstract
Exposure to airborne influenza (or flu) from a patient's cough and exhaled air causes potential flu virus transmission to the persons located nearby. Hospital-acquired influenza is a major airborne disease that occurs to health care workers (HCW).
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- 2017
9. Ambulance disinfection using Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation (UVGI): Effects of fixture location and surface reflectivity
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Robert E. Thewlis, Dylan T. Neu, William G. Lindsley, Stephen B. Martin, Kenneth R. Mead, Tia L. McClelland, and John D. Noti
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Cross infection ,Spores, Bacterial ,Cross Infection ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Ultraviolet Rays ,Ambulances ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental engineering ,Ultraviolet germicidal irradiation ,030501 epidemiology ,Fixture ,Reflectivity ,Service worker ,Article ,Disinfection ,03 medical and health sciences ,Health services ,0302 clinical medicine ,Paint ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Bacillus subtilis - Abstract
Ambulances are frequently contaminated with infectious microorganisms shed by patients during transport that can be transferred to subsequent patients and emergency medical service workers. Manual decontamination is tedious and time-consuming, and persistent contamination is common even after cleaning. Ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI) has been proposed as a terminal disinfection method for ambulance patient compartments. However, no published studies have tested the use of UVGI in ambulances. The objectives of this study were to investigate the efficacy of a UVGI system in an ambulance patient compartment and to examine the impact of UVGI fixture position and the UV reflectivity of interior surfaces on the time required for disinfection. A UVGI fixture was placed in the front, middle or back of an ambulance patient compartment, and the UV irradiance was measured at 49 locations. Aluminum sheets and UV-reflective paint were added to examine the effects of increasing surface reflectivity on disinfection time. Disinfection tests were conducted using Bacillus subtilis spores as a surrogate for pathogens. Our results showed that the UV irradiance varied considerably depending upon the surface location. For example, with the UVGI fixture in the back position and without the addition of UV-reflective surfaces, the most irradiated location received a dose of UVGI sufficient for disinfection in 16 seconds, but the least irradiated location required 15 hours. Because the overall time required to disinfect all of the interior surfaces is determined by the time required to disinfect the surfaces receiving the lowest irradiation levels, the patient compartment disinfection times for different UVGI configurations ranged from 16.5 hours to 59 minutes depending upon the UVGI fixture position and the interior surface reflectivity. These results indicate that UVGI systems can reduce microbial surface contamination in ambulance compartments, but the systems must be rigorously validated before deployment. Optimizing the UVGI fixture position and increasing the UV reflectivity of the interior surfaces can substantially improve the performance of a UVGI system and reduce the time required for disinfection.
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- 2017
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10. Aerosol Generation by Modern Flush Toilets
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Deborah V. L. Hirst, Charles E. Marshall, David L. Johnson, Robert A. Lynch, and Kenneth R. Mead
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Toilet ,Chemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Environmental pollution ,Nanotechnology ,complex mixtures ,Pollution ,Article ,Aerosol ,Plume ,Particle ,Environmental Chemistry ,Seeding ,General Materials Science ,Particle size ,Aerosolization - Abstract
A microbe-contaminated toilet will produce bioaerosols when flushed. We assessed toilet plume aerosol from high efficiency (HET), pressure-assisted high efficiency (PAT), and flushometer (FOM) toilets with similar bowl water and flush volumes. Total and droplet nuclei “bioaerosols” were assessed. Monodisperse 0.25–1.9-μm fluorescent microspheres served as microbe surrogates in separate trials in a mockup 5 m3 water closet (WC). Bowl water seeding was approximately 1012 particles/mL. Droplet nuclei were sampled onto 0.2-μm pore size mixed cellulose ester filters beginning 15 min after the flush using open-face cassettes mounted on the WC walls. Pre- and postflush bowl water concentrations were measured. Filter particle counts were analyzed via fluorescent microscopy. Bowl headspace droplet count size distributions were bimodal and similar for all toilet types and flush conditions, with 95% of droplets 99%
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- 2013
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11. Lifting the lid on toilet plume aerosol: A literature review with suggestions for future research
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Robert A. Lynch, Deborah V. L. Hirst, Kenneth R. Mead, and David L. Johnson
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Epidemiology ,education ,Air Microbiology ,Risk Assessment ,Article ,fluids and secretions ,Environmental health ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Humans ,Medicine ,Toilet Facilities ,Aerosols ,Toilet ,Infectious disease transmission ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,humanities ,digestive system diseases ,Additional research ,Aerosol ,Plume ,Infectious Diseases ,Infectious disease (medical specialty) ,Toilet flushing ,business ,Disease transmission - Abstract
Background The potential risks associated with "toilet plume" aerosols produced by flush toilets is a subject of continuing study. This review examines the evidence regarding toilet plume bioaerosol generation and infectious disease transmission. Methods The peer-reviewed scientific literature was searched to identify articles related to aerosol production during toilet flushing, as well as epidemiologic studies examining the potential role of toilets in infectious disease outbreaks. Results The studies demonstrate that potentially infectious aerosols may be produced in substantial quantities during flushing. Aerosolization can continue through multiple flushes to expose subsequent toilet users. Some of the aerosols desiccate to become droplet nuclei and remain adrift in the air currents. However, no studies have yet clearly demonstrated or refuted toilet plume-related disease transmission, and the significance of the risk remains largely uncharacterized. Conclusion Research suggests that toilet plume could play a contributory role in the transmission of infectious diseases. Additional research in multiple areas is warranted to assess the risks posed by toilet plume, especially within health care facilities.
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- 2013
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12. Effective dust control systems on concrete dowel drilling machinery
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Daniel R. Farwick, Dawn Ramsey Farwick, Kenneth R. Mead, Alan Echt, H. Amy Feng, and Wayne T. Sanderson
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Engineering ,Dowel ,Air Pollutants, Occupational ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,complex mixtures ,Article ,Respirable dust ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Occupational Exposure ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Inhalation Exposure ,Drill ,Petroleum engineering ,business.industry ,Construction Materials ,Construction Industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Drilling ,Sampling (statistics) ,Dust ,Structural engineering ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Drilling machines ,Control system ,Particulate Matter ,Dust control ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Rotary-type percussion dowel drilling machines, which drill horizontal holes in concrete pavement, have been documented to produce respirable crystalline silica concentrations above recommended exposure criteria. This places operators at potential risk for developing health effects from exposure. United States manufacturers of these machines offer optional dust control systems. The effectiveness of the dust control systems to reduce respirable dust concentrations on two types of drilling machines was evaluated under controlled conditions with the machines operating inside large tent structures in an effort to eliminate secondary exposure sources not related to the dowel-drilling operation. Area air samples were collected at breathing zone height at three locations around each machine. Through equal numbers of sampling rounds with the control systems randomly selected to be on or off, the control systems were found to significantly reduce respirable dust concentrations from a geometric mean of 54 mg per cubic meter to 3.0 mg per cubic meter on one machine and 57 mg per cubic meter to 5.3 mg per cubic meter on the other machine. This research shows that the dust control systems can dramatically reduce respirable dust concentrations by over 90% under controlled conditions. However, these systems need to be evaluated under actual work conditions to determine their effectiveness in reducing worker exposures to crystalline silica below hazardous levels.
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- 2016
13. Development of the chemical exposure monitor with indoor positioning (CEMWIP) for workplace VOC surveys
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R.T. Voorhees, R.J. Kovein, Kenneth K. Brown, Peter B. Shaw, Kenneth R. Mead, and A.R. Brandes
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Air Pollutants, Occupational ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Standard deviation ,Article ,Chemical exposure ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Occupational Exposure ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Calibration ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Exposure assessment ,Remote sensing ,Detection limit ,Volatile Organic Compounds ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental engineering ,Humidity ,Location systems ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Chemical sensor ,United States ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Environmental science ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The purpose of this project was to research and develop a direct-reading exposure assessment method that combined a real-time location system with a wireless direct-reading personal chemical sensor. The personal chemical sensor was a photoionization device for detecting volatile organic compounds. The combined system was calibrated and tested against the same four standard gas concentrations and calibrated at one standard location and tested at four locations that included the standard locations. Data were wirelessly collected from the chemical sensor every 1.4 seconds, for volatile organic compounds concentration, location, temperature, humidity, and time. Regression analysis of the photo-ionization device voltage response against calibration gases showed the chemical sensor had a limit of detection of 0.2 ppm. The real-time location system was accurate to 13 cm ± 6 cm (standard deviation) in an open area and to 57 cm ± 31 cm in a closed room where the radio frequency has to penetrate drywall-finished walls. The streaming data were collected and graphically displayed as a three-dimensional hazard map for assessment of peak exposure with location. A real-time personal exposure assessment device with indoor positioning was practical and provided new knowledge on direct reading exposure assessment methods.
- Published
- 2016
14. Computational fluid dynamics study on the influence of an alternate ventilation configuration on the possible flow path of infectious cough aerosols in a mock airborne infection isolation room
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Urmila Ghia, Deepthi Sharan Thatiparti, and Kenneth R. Mead
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Environmental Engineering ,Air stream ,Waste management ,Air changes per hour ,Indoor bioaerosol ,Environmental engineering ,Building and Construction ,Health care workforce ,System configuration ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Aerosol ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fresh air ,Environmental science ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Bioaerosol - Abstract
When infectious epidemics occur, they can be perpetuated within health care settings, potentially resulting in severe health care workforce absenteeism, morbidity, mortality, and economic losses. The ventilation system configuration of an airborne infection isolation room is one factor that can play a role in protecting health care workers from infectious patient bioaerosols. Though commonly associated with airborne infectious diseases, the airborne infection isolation room design can also impact other transmission routes such as short-range airborne as well as fomite and contact transmission routes that are impacted by contagion concentration and recirculation. This article presents a computational fluid dynamics study on the influence of the ventilation configuration on the possible flow path of bioaerosol dispersal behavior in a mock airborne infection isolation room. At first, a mock airborne infection isolation room was modeled that has the room geometry and layout, ventilation parameters, and pressurization corresponding to that of a traditional ceiling-mounted ventilation arrangement observed in existing hospitals. An alternate ventilation configuration was then modeled to retain the linear supply diffuser in the original mock airborne infection isolation room but interchanging the square supply and exhaust locations to place the exhaust closer to the patient source and allow clean air from supply vents to flow in clean-to-dirty flow paths, originating in uncontaminated parts of the room prior to entering the contaminated patient's air space. The modeled alternate airborne infection isolation room ventilation rate was 12 air changes per hour. Two human breathing models were used to simulate a source patient and a receiving health care worker. A patient cough cycle was introduced into the simulation, and the airborne infection dispersal was tracked in time using a multi-phase flow simulation approach. The results from the alternate configuration revealed that the cough aerosols were pulled by the exhaust vent without encountering the health care worker by 0.93 s after patient coughs and the particles were controlled as the aerosols' flow path was uninterrupted by an air particle streamline from patient to the ceiling exhaust venting out cough aerosols. However, not all the aerosols were vented out of the room. The remaining cough aerosols entered the health care worker's breathing zone by 0.98 s. This resulted in one of the critical stages in terms of the health care worker's exposure to airborne virus and presented the opportunity for the health care worker to suffer adverse health effects from the inhalation of cough aerosols. Within 2 s, the cough aerosols reentered and recirculated within the patient and health care worker's surroundings resulting in pockets of old contaminated air. By this time, coalescence losses decreased as the aerosol were no longer in very close proximity and their movement was primarily influenced by the airborne infection isolation room airflow patterns. In the patient and health care worker's area away from the supply, the fresh air supply failed to reach this part of the room to quickly dilute the cough aerosol concentration. The exhaust was also found to have minimal effect upon cough aerosol removal, except for those areas with high exhaust velocities, very close to the exhaust grill. Within 5-20 s after a patient's cough, the aerosols tended to break up to form smaller sized aerosols of less than one micron diameter. They remained airborne and entrained back into the supply air stream, spreading into the entire room. The suspended aerosols resulted in the floating time of more than 21 s in the room due to one cough cycle. The duration of airborne contagion in the room and its prolonged exposure to the health care worker is likely to happen due to successive coughing cycles. Hence, the evaluated alternate airborne infection isolation room is not effective in removing at least 38% particles exposed to health care worker within the first second of a patient's cough.
- Published
- 2016
15. Recommendations to Improve Employee Thermal Comfort When Working in 40°F Refrigerated Cold Rooms
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Jessica G. Ramsey, Diana M. Ceballos, and Kenneth R. Mead
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Engineering ,Food Handling ,Article ,law.invention ,Aeronautics ,Protective Clothing ,law ,Stress, Physiological ,Occupational Exposure ,Forensic engineering ,Humans ,Lack of knowledge ,Thermosensing ,Personal protective equipment ,Air Movements ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Thermal comfort ,Humidity ,Food safety ,Ventilation ,Cold Temperature ,Schedule (workplace) ,Work (electrical) ,Ventilation (architecture) ,Food preparation ,business ,Gloves, Protective - Abstract
Cold rooms are commonly used for food storage and preparation, and are usually kept around 40°F following food safety guidelines. Some food preparation employees may spend 8 or more hours inside cold rooms. These employees may not be aware of the risks associated with mildly cold temperatures, dampness, and limited ventilation. We performed an evaluation of cold rooms at an airline catering facility because of concerns with exposure to cold temperatures. We spoke with and observed employees in two cold rooms, reviewed daily temperature logs, evaluated employee’s physical activity, work/rest schedule, and protective clothing. We measured temperature, percent relative humidity, and air velocities at different work stations inside the cold rooms. We concluded that thermal comfort concerns perceived by cold room employees may have been the result of air drafts at their workstations, insufficient use of personal protective equipment due to dexterity concerns, work practices, and lack of knowledge about good health and safety practices in cold rooms. These moderately cold work conditions with low air velocities are not well covered in current occupational health and safety guidelines, and wind chill calculations do not apply. We provide practical recommendations to improve thermal comfort of cold room employees. Engineering control recommendations include the redesigning of air deflectors and installing of suspended baffles. Administrative controls include the changing out of wet clothing, providing hand warmers outside of cold rooms, and educating employees on cold stress. We also recommended providing more options on personal protective equipment. However, there is a need for guidelines and educational materials tailored to employees in moderately cold environments to improve thermal comfort and minimize health and safety problems.
- Published
- 2015
16. An evaluation of portable high-efficiency particulate air filtration for expedient patient isolation in epidemic and emergency response
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David L. Johnson and Kenneth R. Mead
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Air filtration ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Isolation (health care) ,Article ,Disease Outbreaks ,law.invention ,Patient Isolation ,law ,Intensive care ,Health care ,Medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Filtration ,Patient isolation ,business.industry ,Micropore Filters ,Particulates ,medicine.disease ,Bioterrorism ,Ventilation ,Ventilation (architecture) ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Emergency Medicine ,Feasibility Studies ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Extraordinary incidents resulting in airborne infectious disease outbreaks could produce patient isolation requirements that exceed most hospitals' capacity. This article investigates expedient methods to establish airborne infection isolation areas using a commercially available portable filtration unit and common hardware supplies. The study was conducted within a conventional, nonisolation hospital room, and researchers evaluated several airborne isolation configurations that did not require building ventilation or structural modifications. A portable high-efficiency particulate air filtration unit and full-length plastic curtains established a "zone-within-zone" protective environment using local capture and directional airflows. The cost of constructing the expedient configurations was less than US2,300 dollars and required fewer than 3 person-hours to construct. A medical nebulizer aerosolized polystyrene latex microspheres to generate respirable condensation nuclei. Aerosol spectrometers sized and counted respirable particles at the source patient and health care worker positions and in areas outside the inner zone. The best-performing designs showed no measurable source migration out of the inner isolation zone and mean respirable particle counts up to 87% lower at the health care worker position(s) than those observed directly near the source patient location. Investigators conclude that with careful implementation under emergency circumstances in which engineered isolation rooms are unavailable, expedient methods can provide affordable and effective patient isolation while reducing exposure risks and potential disease transmission to health care workers, other patients, and visitors.
- Published
- 2004
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