The Guardian Australia

Give FFP3 masks to NHS staff during Omicron, doctors say

- Denis Campbell Health policy editor

NHS staff treating Covid patients should be given much more protective facewear than thin surgical masks to help them avoid getting infected during the Omicron rise, doctors say.

The British Medical Associatio­n (BMA), Hospital Consultant­s and Specialist­s Associatio­n (HCSA) and Doctors’ Associatio­n UK are calling for frontline personnel to be given FFP3 masks.

Making the much higher-quality face masks standard issue would save the lives of health workers who fall ill as a result of treating Covid patients, the BMA said. “At this critical point in the pandemic this is extremely urgent – a matter of life and death,” said Prof Raymond Agius, the acting chair of the doctors’ union’s occupation­al health committee.

FFP3 masks, also known as filtering facepiece respirator­s, have been shown in a trial in Addenbrook­e’s hospital in Cambridge to reduce the number of healthcare staff who become infected.

However, the Department of Health and Social Care’s (DHSC) guidance on personal protective equipment, updated last week, only recommends their use in limited circumstan­ces.

“With a high transmissi­ble new strain now circulatin­g, and clear evidence that Covid-19 spreads in small airborne particles, healthcare workers must be given the best possible protection against the virus. Surgical masks don’t give the necessary protection against airborne transmissi­on of Covid,”

Agius said.

The BMA has written to every hospital trust in England demanding that any health profession­al treating patients who are or may be Covid-positive should be routinely issued with FFP3s, which are much more expensive than the surgical masks usually provided.

Surgical masks are “unsuitable” given the threat Covid poses, the BMA believes.

In its letter it has reminded hospital chief executives of their legal responsibi­lities as employers to keep their staff safe from harm, including by providing FFP3s.

A handful of hospitals are understood to already issued FFP3 respirator­s as standard, but most do not.

Dr Claudia Paoloni, the president of the HCSA, said that giving staff proper PPE would help reduce the fast-growing tide of sickness absence among frontline workers who are getting Covid.

“If we don’t get PPE right we risk contributi­ng to a further wave of sickness absences when hospitals and patients can least afford it.

“The current reliance on inadequate fluid-resistant surgical masks is likely to leave staff vulnerable in enclosed hospital settings,” Paoloni said.

“The fear, as in 2020, is that we are seeing a cavalier approach to safety where infection control guidelines are once again being driven by supply issues and cost.

“We need hospitals to see sense and take a precaution­ary approach,” by making FFP3s available to anyone who wants to use one instead of a surgical mask, Paoloni added.

The BMA has also written to NHS England asking it to ensure all GP practices are also issued with FFP3s instead of surgical masks, particular­ly because family doctors often work in small, cramped surgeries.

“Healthcare workers in hospitals and GP surgeries are putting themselves and potentiall­y their own families at risk, particular­ly with this new, highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant,” said Dr Vishal Sharma, the chair of the BMA’s pensions committee.

The DHSC’s updated guidance, published last Tuesday, says “staff should assess any likely blood and body fluid exposure risk and ensure PPE is worn that provides adequate protection against the risks associated with the procedure or task being undertaken”. However, it only advises frontline staff to use an FFP3 if they are undertakin­g an aerosol-generating procedure, such as intubating a patient who is going on to a mechanical ventilator, and not with Covid patients generally.

A DHSC spokespers­on confirmed that it does not plan to recommend routine use of FFP3 masks.

“The safety of the NHS and social care staff has always been our top priority and we continue to deliver PPE to protect those on the frontline.

“Guidance on the appropriat­e levels and standards of PPE is written by clinical experts. Updated infection prevention control guidance was published this month to reflect the latest scientific understand­ing on how to prevent transmissi­on of Covid-19.

“Emerging evidence and data are continuall­y monitored and reviewed and guidance will be amended accordingl­y if appropriat­e.”

 ?? Photograph: Victoria Jones/PA ?? The FFP3 face mask is much more effective but expensive. The Department of Health and Social Care only recommends their use in limited circumstan­ces.
Photograph: Victoria Jones/PA The FFP3 face mask is much more effective but expensive. The Department of Health and Social Care only recommends their use in limited circumstan­ces.

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