Introduction
- This standard applies to General Industry (Part 1910), Shipyards (Part 1915), Marine Terminals
(Part 1917), Longshoring (Part 1918), and Construction (Part 1926).
(a) Permissible Practice
- Paragraph (a)(1) establishes OSHA’s hierarchy of controls by requiring the use of feasible engineering controls
as the primary means to control air contaminants. Respirators are required when “effective
engineering controls are not feasible, or while they are being instituted.”
- Paragraph (a)(2) requires employers to provide employees with respirators that are “applicable
and suitable” for the purpose intended “when such equipment is necessary to protect the health of
the employee.”
(b) Definitions
This paragraph contains definitions of important terms used in the regulatory
text.
(c) Respiratory Protection Program
- Must designate a qualified program administrator to oversee the program.
- Must provide respirators, training, and medical evaluations at no cost to the employee.
- OSHA has prepared a Small Entity Compliance Guide that contains criteria for selection of a program administrator and a sample program.
Text version of flowchart:
Respirator-Use
Requirements Flow Chart
29 CFR 1910.134(c) |
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Are respirators:
- necessary to protect the health of the employees; or
- required by the employer?
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V |
YES |
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V |
NO |
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Must establish and implement a written respirator program with
worksite-specific procedures. |
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Does the employer permit voluntary use of respirators? |
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YES |
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V |
NO |
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V |
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Does the only use of respirators involve the voluntary use of filtering
facepieces (dust masks)? |
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V |
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V |
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- Employer determines that the respirator itself does not crate a hazard.
- Must provide users with information contained in Appendix D.
- No respirator program required.
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- Employer determines that the respirator itself does not create a hazard.
- Must provide users with information contained in Appendix D.
- Must establish and implement those elements of a written respirator program necessary to
ensure that employee is medically able to use that respirator.
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(d) Selection of Respirators
- Must select a respirator certified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) which must be used in compliance
with the conditions of its certification.
- Must identify and evaluate the respiratory hazards in the workplace, including a reasonable
estimate of employee exposures and identification of the contaminant’s chemical state and physical
form.
- Where exposure cannot be identified or reasonably estimated, the atmosphere shall be considered
immediately dangerous to life or health (IDLH).
- Respirators for IDLH atmospheres:
- Approved respirators:
- full facepiece pressure demand self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) certified by NIOSH for
a minimum service life of thirty minutes, or
- combination full facepiece pressure demand supplied-air respirator (SAR) with auxiliary
self-contained air supply.
- All oxygen-deficient atmospheres (less than 19.5% O2 by volume) shall be considered IDLH.
Exception: If the employer can demonstrate that, under all foreseeable
conditions, oxygen levels in the work area can be maintained within the ranges specified in Table
II (i.e., between 19.5% and a lower value that corresponds to an altitude-adjusted oxygen partial
pressure equivalent to 16% oxygen at sea level), then any atmosphere-supplying respirator may be
used.
- Respirators for non-IDLH atmospheres:
- Employers must use the assigned protection factors (APFs) listed in Table 1 to select a
respirator that meets or exceeds the required level of employee protection.
- When using a combination respirator (e.g., airline respirators with an air-purifying filter),
employers must ensure that the assigned protection factor is appropriate to the mode of operation
in which the respirator is being used.
- Must select a respirator for employee use that maintains the employee’s exposure to the hazardous
substance, when measured outside the respirator, at or below the maximum use concentration (MUC).
- Must not apply MUCs to conditions that are IDLH; instead must use respirators listed for
IDLH conditions in paragraph (d)(2) of this standard.
- When the calculated MUC exceeds the IDLH level or the performance limits of the cartridge
or canister, then employers must set the maximum MUC at that lower limit.
- The respirator selected shall be appropriate for the chemical state and physical form of
the contaminant.
- For protection against gases and vapors, the employer shall provide:
- an atmosphere-supplying respirator, or
- an air-purifying respirator, provided that:
- the respirator is equipped with an end-of-service-life indicator (ESLI) certified by
NIOSH for the contaminant; or
- if there is no ESLI appropriate for conditions of the employer’s workplace, the employer
implements a change schedule for canisters and cartridges that will ensure that they are
changed before the end of their service life and describes in the respirator program the
information and data relied upon and basis for the change schedule and reliance on the data.
- For protection against particulates, the employer shall provide:
- an atmosphere-supplying respirator; or
- an air-purifying respirator equipped with high efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters
certified by NIOSH under 30 CFR Part 11 or with filters certified for particulates under 42
CFR Part 84; or
- an air-purifying respirator equipped with any filter certified for particulates by NIOSH
for contaminants consisting primarily of particles with mass median aerodynamic diameters of
at least 2 micrometers.
(e) Medical Evaluation
- Must provide a medical evaluation to determine employee’s ability to use a respirator, before fit testing and use.
- Must identify a physician or other licensed health care professional (PLHCP)
to perform medical evaluations using a medical questionnaire or an initial medical examination that
obtains the same information as the medical questionnaire (information required is contained in
mandatory Appendix C).
- Must obtain a written recommendation regarding the employee’s ability to use the respirator from the PLHCP.
- Additional medical evaluations are required under certain circumstances, e.g.:
- employee reports medical signs or symptoms related to ability to use respirator;
- PLHCP, program administrator, or supervisor recommends reevaluation;
- information from the respirator program, including observations made during fit testing and
program evaluation, indicates a need; or
- change occurs in workplace conditions that may substantially increase the physiological burden
on an employee.
- Annual review of medical status is not required.
(f) Fit Testing
- All employees using a negative or positive pressure tight-fitting facepiece respirator must pass an appropriate qualitative fit test
(QLFT) or quantitative fit test (QNFT).
- Fit testing is required prior to initial use, whenever a different respirator facepiece is used, and at least annually thereafter.
An additional fit test is required whenever the employee reports, or the employer or PLHCP makes
visual observations of, changes in the employee’s physical condition that could affect respirator
fit (e.g., facial scarring, dental changes, cosmetic surgery, or an obvious change in body weight).
- The fit test shall be administered using an OSHA-accepted QLFT or QNFT protocol, as contained in
mandatory Appendix A.
- QLFT Protocols:
- Isoamyl acetate
- Saccharin
- Bitrex
- Irritant smoke
- QNFT Protocols:
- Generated Aerosol (corn oil, salt, DEHP)
- Condensation Nuclei Counter (PortaCount)
- Controlled Negative Pressure (Dynatech FitTester 3000)
- Controlled Negative Pressure (CNP) REDON
- QLFT may only be used to fit test negative pressure air-purifying
respirators (APRs) that must achieve a fit factor of 100 or less.
- If the fit factor determined through QNFT is ≥100 for tight-fitting half facepieces, or ≥500 for
tight-fitting full facepieces, the QNFT has been passed with that respirator.
Note: If a particular OSHA standard (e.g., 29 CFR
1910.1001 Asbestos) requires the use of a full facepiece APR capable of providing protection in
concentrations up to 50 times the Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL), this respirator must be QNFT.
This is because a protection factor of 50 (50 X PEL) multiplied by a standard safety factor of 10 is
equivalent to a fit factor of 500.
The safety factor of 10 is used because protection factors in the workplace tend to be much lower
than the fit factors achieved during fit testing. The use of a safety factor is a standard practice
supported by most experts to offset this limitation. This is discussed in the record at 63 FR 1225. |
(g) Use of Respirators
- Tight-fitting respirators shall not be worn by employees who have facial hair or any condition
that interferes with the face-to-facepiece seal or valve function.
- Personal protective equipment shall be worn in such a manner that does not interfere with the
seal of the facepiece to the face of the user.
- Employees shall perform a user seal check each time they put on a tight-fitting
respirator using the procedures in mandatory Appendix B-1 or equally effective manufacturer’s procedures.
- Procedures for respirator use in IDLH atmospheres are stated. In addition to these requirements,
interior structural firefighting requires the use of SCBAs and a protective practice known as
“2-in/2-out” — at least two employees must enter and remain in visual or voice contact with one
another at all times, and at least two employees must be located outside. (Note that this is not
meant to preclude firefighters from performing emergency rescue activities before an entire team
has assembled.)
(h) Maintenance and Care of Respirators
Must clean and disinfect respirators using the procedures in Appendix B-2, or equally effective manufacturer's
procedures at the following intervals:
- as often as necessary to maintain a sanitary condition for exclusive use respirators,
- before being worn by different individuals when issued to more than one employee, and
- after each use for emergency use respirators and those used in fit testing and training.
(i) Breathing Air Quality and Use
Compressed breathing air shall meet the requirements for Type 1-Grade D breathing air as described in ANSI/CGA
Commodity Specification for Air, G-7.1-1989.
(j) Identification of Filters, Cartridges, and Canisters
- All filters, cartridges, and canisters used in the workplace must be labeled and color coded with the NIOSH approval label.
- The label must not be removed and must remain legible.
(k) Training and Information
- Must provide effective training to respirator users, including:
- why the respirator is necessary and how improper fit, use, or maintenance can compromise the
protective effect of the respirator
- limitations and capabilities of the respirator
- use in emergency situations
- how to inspect, put on and remove, use and check the seals
- procedures for maintenance and storage
- recognition of medical signs and symptoms that may limit or prevent effective use
- general requirements of this standard
- Training required prior to initial use, unless acceptable training has been provided by another employer within the past 12 months.
- Retraining required annually and when:
- workplace conditions change,
- new types of respirator are used, or
- inadequacies in the employee’s knowledge or use indicates need.
- The basic advisory information in Appendix D shall be provided to employees who wear respirators when their use is not required.
(l) Program Evaluation
Employer must conduct evaluations of the workplace as necessary to ensure proper implementation of the program and
consult with employees to ensure proper use.
(m) Recordkeeping
- Records of medical evaluations must be retained and made available per 29 CFR 1910.1020.
- A record of fit tests must be established and retained until the next fit test.
- A written copy of the current program must be retained.
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