OSHA Allows Healthcare Employers to Suspend N95 Annual Fit-Testing During Coronavirus “Outbreak”


On March 14, 2020, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued temporary enforcement guidance addressing the fit-testing requirements in the agency’s respiratory protection standard (29 C.F.R. § 1910.134). The guidance applies to healthcare workers using N95 respirators to protect them from the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19). Driving the guidance is the current supply shortage of N95 filtering facepiece respirators, which are destroyed or compromised during the fit-testing process.

OSHA is directing its field offices to exercise enforcement discretion when evaluating a healthcare employer’s compliance efforts with the respiratory protection standard’s annual fit-testing requirement, § 1910.134(f)(2). According to the guidance, the agency is directing inspectors to excuse noncompliance with annual fit testing so long as the healthcare employer is:

Annual Fit-Testing in the Healthcare Industry

Annual fit testing requires employers to test respirators each year to ensure that they remain effective for employee use. An employee wears the respirator and tests are performed to determine whether it remains effective for that individual employee. OSHA authorizes two kinds of testing: quantitative and qualitative. Quantitative testing destroys N95 respirators. Qualitative testing generally does not, although some experts suggest discarding the respirators used during testing. With the healthcare industry is facing a shortage of N95 respirators, OSHA decided the lesser hazard is to have employers forego annual fit testing rather than exacerbate the supply shortage.


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National Law Review, Volume X, Number 79