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Appendix B <br />Personal Protective Equipment <br />This appendix sets forth information about personal protective equipment (PPE) protection levels which may be used <br />to assist employers in complying with the PPE requirements of this section. <br />As required by the standard, PPE must be selected which will protect employees from the specific hazards which <br />they are likely to encounter during their work on-site. <br />Selection of the appropriate PPE is a complex process which should take into consideration a variety of factors. Key <br />factors involved in this process are identification of the hazards, or suspected hazards; their routes of potential hazard <br />to employees (inhalation, skin absorption, ingestion, and eye or skin contact); and the performance of the PPE <br />materials (and seams) in providing a barrier to these hazards. The amount of protection provided by PPE is material- <br />hazard specific. That is, protective equipment materials will protect well against some hazardous substances and <br />poorly, or not at all, against others. In many instances, protective equipment materials cannot be found which will <br />provide continuous protection from the particular hazardous substance. In these cases the breakthrough time of the <br />protective material should exceed the work durations.(end of sentence deleted - FR 14074, Apr 13. 1990) <br />Other factors in this selection process to be considered are matching the PPE to the employee's work requirements <br />and task-specific conditions. The durability of PPE materials, such as tear strength and seam strength, should be <br />considered in relation to the employee's tasks . The effects of PPE in relation to heat stress and task duration are a <br />factor in selecting and using PPE. In some cases layers of PPE may be necessary to provide sufficient protection, or <br />to protect expensive PPE inner garments, suits or equipment. <br />The more that is known about the hazards at the site, the easier the job of PPE selection becomes. As more <br />information about the hazards and conditions at the site becomes available, the site supervisor can make decisions to <br />up-grade or down-grade the level of PPE protection to match the tasks at hand. <br />The following are guidelines which an employer can use to begin the selection of the appropriate PPE. As noted <br />above, the site information may suggest the use of combinations of PPE selected from the different protection levels <br />(i.e., A, B, C, or D) as being more suitable to the hazards of the work. It should be cautioned that the listing below <br />does not fully address the performance of the specific PPE material in relation to the specific hazards at the job site, <br />and that PPE selection, evaluation and re-selection is an ongoing process until sufficient information about the <br />hazards and PPE performance is obtained. <br />Part A. Personal protective equipment is divided into four categories based on the degree of protection afforded. (See <br />Part B of this appendix for further explanation of Levels A, B, C, and D hazards.) <br />I. Level A - To be selected when the greatest level of skin, respiratory, and eye protection is required. <br />12