They should have a basic idea; wear the outfit, and decon it before you take it off. 90% of that process is common sense, and the rest they could learn from any of the HAZMAT-handling chemical companies all around DFW that use the same gear, albeit for different environments...or from the Frisco Fire Department, which obviously had better stuff on hand than Presbyterian was putting on their nurses.sjfcontrol wrote:And, you know, if they didn't have the proper protective gear, they sure as heck weren't training with the proper protective gear, either. Presumably, the gear could have been shipped overnight (or couriered even faster). But they still wouldn't know what to do with it.
I'm not going to call and ask because I'm sure they're swamped now, but I'd bet ILC normally keeps a stock of Chemturion suits in each size, and having worked for an oilfield company, I know that it's absolutely possible and fairly common to throw enough money at any particular problem to have any in-stock part anywhere in the world at just about two or three hours behind minimum flight time of the fastest GA aircraft capable of lifting it, based within 50 miles of its point of origin. There are people who make a pretty good living making exactly that happen, and they can carry PPE just as easily as pump parts.
So, one day of minimal contact using hooded Tyvek "bunny suits" with normal NBC full face respirators and taped on gloves, and then you have whatever gear you're willing to pay for, regardless of where it was when you started.