- Author
- Lawson, J. R. | Jarboe, T. L.
- Title
- Aid for Decontamination of Fire and Rescue Service Protective Clothing and Equipment After Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Exposures.
- Coporate
- National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD
- Report
- NIST SP 981, May 2002, 84 p.
- Keywords
- decontamination | protective clothing | protective equipment | rescue | exposure | fire fighters | hazardous materials | injuries
- Identifiers
- normal care and cleaning; chemical, biological and radiological environments; impact of decontamination on PPE; emergency decontamination of injured personnel; emical warfare agents and toxic industrial chemicals; biological agent exposures; radiological materials and ionizing radiaiton; decontamination for multiple WMD threat exposures; post-incident equipment decontamination
- Abstract
- The first priority for fire service personnel and all emergency first responders when responding to any call is the safety of all emergency personnel responding to the call. Emergency first responders have been called to every recent terrorist attack in North America, and they will continue to be called since it is their job to access the situation, establish control over the situation, and attempt to rescue people threatened by the attack. The threat of chemical, biological, and radiological (CBR) attack is apparent, and all first responders must be prepared to address the possibility. This document provides the first responder with basic procedures for emergency decontamination of personal protective clothing and equipment (PPE) in the event that it is exposed to CBR threats. It also addresses processes for safely securing protective clothing and equipment that is considered to be unusable after a CBR exposure. In addition, common methods used for decontamination of HAZMAT protective clothing and equipment are included, and it includes information for normal cleaning of fire service PPE. This document has not been prepared to address decontamination processes for all known chemical or biological agents or radiological materials, but it has been prepared to address approaches that may be used in emergency situations to decontaminate and/or secure PPE that has been exposed to the more common CBR threats.