Introduction
Hazardous materials can be classified as chemical, radiological, or biological agents that can cause human illness when contacted. The basic physical and chemical properties of a hazardous material determine the manner in which victims/patients are exposed, the degree of morbidity and mortality associated with a given “hazmat” event, the type of decontamination necessary, and the type of personal protective equipment (PPE) required in the response.
Each hazardous material has a unique set of chemical properties. Here we will discuss the chemical properties of a hazardous material that can be used to place it into a group allowing assessment of the potential for contamination, the extent of exposure, the decontamination process, and type of PPE required.
Types of contamination
In order to understand the effect of chemical properties on hazardous materials response, we must first differentiate between exposure and contamination and discuss the types of contamination that can occur.
When an object or individual is exposed to or comes into contact with a hazardous material, that object or individual may or may not become contaminated with the substance. Contamination occurs when the hazardous substance is physically transferred from the source to an object or individual.
Primary contamination occurs when an object or individual comes into direct contact with a hazardous material in such a manner that the material is transferred from the source and is physically on the object or individual. This type of contamination is most common in victims at the hazmat site, as well as first responders including police, fire, and EMS personnel [6].
Secondary contamination occurs when an object or individual comes into contact with a contaminated object. The hazardous material on the object may then be transferred to the clean object or individual, resulting in secondary contamination. Secondary contamination is the most common manner in which health care workers, such as emergency department staff receiving patients from the field, become contaminated after the release of a hazardous material [6,7].
Both primary and secondary contamination may occur in an overt or covert manner.
Overt exposure occurs when something is obviously contaminated or exposure is known. Overt exposures may become obvious when a material causes rapid onset of symptoms, or the material is a large liquid or solid that can easily be identified. Both of the examples above (the release of sarin and the child with muddy hands) illustrate overt exposures. The release of sarin “gas” (actually a liquid vapor) may be too small to detect visually but the rapid onset of symptoms allows for early identification of contamination. The dirt on the child’s hands illustrates a material that can be visually identified despite the distance in both time and space from the scene.
Covert exposure occurs when an object or individual does not have obvious contamination or does not immediately know that he or she has been contaminated. Covert exposure may occur when the hazardous material is associated with delayed onset of symptoms or a hazardous material is too small to see. Biological agents are commonly associated with covert exposure. As illustrated in the example below, biological agents not only are too small to see but also have an incubation period in which exposed individuals are not aware that they have been exposed.
An understanding of the types of contamination allows first responders to be aware of the potential for contamination and protect themselves and others. Only with vigilance can we control or mitigate secondary contamination. Mitigation is critical and can prevent a small incident from becoming a mass causality incident or true disaster.
General categories of hazardous materials
One common method used to group hazardous material incidents is by the category of material involved: chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN – note that E for Explosives is sometimes added to this acronym in the context of weapons of mass destruction). Each category has unique characteristics and requires a different approach to decontamination. Knowledge of the categories will aid in understanding the expected patient presentation and type of decontamination required.
Chemical
Exposure to a chemical hazard is generally overt; patients are immediately aware of their contamination. Most who are contaminated by chemicals will require formal decontamination. The morbidity associated with the event will depend on the physical properties of the chemical encountered.
Biological
Biological agents include bacteria, viruses, and biological toxins. Biological events are unique in that the release of biological hazards is almost always covert. Because of this, contaminated patients will likely have already performed decontamination at home without knowledge that contamination has occurred, having returned home, changed clothes, and showered as part of their normal daily routine. For most exposures this will be sufficient, and no further decontamination is necessary.
There have been instances in which exposure to a suspected biological agent has occurred in an overt fashion, such as the anthrax scare events that occurred in the wake of the 2001 anthrax attack. When exposure to a biological agent is suspected, exposed and/or contaminated individuals may be instructed to wash their hands and face in a bathroom, return home, change and wash clothes, shower, and then wash surfaces they have contacted since the time of the exposure. Biological hazmat incidents are unique in that responders must consider prophylactic treatment of the biological exposure based on the agent involved [10]. Consultation with the local or state health department should occur when considering such measures.