Workplace Health and Safety, volume 71, issue 7, pages 216507992311647

Examining the Impact of Elastomeric Half Mask Respirator Knowledge and User Barriers on Safety Climate Perceptions in Health Care Settings

Emily J. Haas 1
Katherine Yoon 1
Caitlin McClain 1
Margaret Sietsema 1
Adam Hornbeck 1
Stella E. Hines 2
Sricharan Chalikonda 3
Sara Angelilli 3
Hope Waltenbaugh 3
PAUL THURMAN 4
Meghan Napoli 3
Rohan Fernando 1
Show full list: 12 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-05-11
scimago Q2
SJR0.613
CiteScore3.7
Impact factor2.3
ISSN21650799, 21650969
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Nursing (miscellaneous)
Abstract
Background:

Availability of personal protective equipment (PPE) and its effective use may influence safety climate perceptions among health care personnel (HCP). It is unclear how health care organizations can leverage the effective use of respiratory protection to engage in continuous improvement of their safety climate, which can inform opportunities for employee education and engagement.

Methods:

After using an elastomeric half mask respirator (EHMR) as their primary form of respiratory protection for several months, 1,080 HCP provided feedback in an electronic survey about respiratory protection training, confidence in EHMR use, barriers during use, and perceived safety climate. Ordinal logistic regressions were used as nonlinear models to test relationships between these variables.

Findings:

We observed that an increase in user confidence ( p < .013), training content ( p < .001), training formats ( p < .001), and a decrease in EHMR barriers ( p < .001) were associated with a statistically significant increase in proactive safety climate. In the second model, an increase in user confidence ( p < .006) and training content ( p < .001), and a decrease in barriers ( p < .001), was associated with a statistically significant increase in compliant safety climate.

Conclusions/Application to Practice:

HCP EHMR confidence was positively associated with safety climate perceptions, underscoring the value of competency building by respiratory protection leaders prior to implementation. Because fewer barriers experienced while using an EHMR were associated with a more positive perception of safety climate, it is important to first communicate with end users about potential barriers and, second, to continue research with end users and manufacturers to improve the design of EHMRs moving forward.

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