Occupational Exposure Monitoring of Airborne Respiratory Viruses in Outpatient Medical Clinics

William B. Vass, AMIN SHIRKHANI, Mohammad Washeem, Sripriya Nannu Shankar, Yuetong Zhang, Tracey Moquin, Rebeccah Messcher, Matthew D. Jansen, James R Clugston, Matthew Walser, Yang Yang, John Lednicky, Z. Hugh Fan, Chang Yu Wu, University of Florida

     Abstract Number: 21
     Working Group: Bioaerosols

Abstract
Exposure to airborne respiratory viruses can be a health hazard in occupational settings. In this study, air sampling was conducted from January to March 2023 in two outpatient medical clinics—one primary care clinic and one clinic dedicated to the diagnosis and treatment of respiratory illnesses—for the purpose of measuring airborne respiratory virus presence. Work involved the operation of a BioSpot-VIVASTM as a stationary air sampler and deployment of NIOSH BC-251 bioaerosol samplers as either stationary devices or personal air samplers worn by staff members. Results were correlated with deidentified clinical data from patient testing. Samples from seven days were analyzed for SARS-CoV-2, influenza A H1N1 and H3N2 viruses, and influenza B Victoria- and Yamagata-lineage viruses, with an overall 17.5% (17/97) positivity rate. Airborne viruses predominated in particles of aerodynamic diameters from 1-4 μm and were recovered in similar quantities from both clinics. BC-251 samplers (17.4%, 15/86) and VIVAS (18.2%, 2/11) collected detectable viruses at similar rates, but more numerous BC-251 samplers provided greater insight into virus presence across clinical spaces and job categories. 60% of samples from reception areas contained detectable virus, and exposure to significantly more virus (p = 0.0028) occurred at reception desks as compared to the “mobile” job categories of medical providers and nurses. Overall, this study provides valuable insights into the impacts of hazard mitigation controls tailored to reducing respiratory virus exposure and highlights the need for continued diligence toward exposure risk mitigation in outpatient medical clinics.