What this quiz covers This quiz is about decontamination procedures in hazardous operations: decon lines, zone control, removal sequence, contamination reduction, and preventing spread to clean areas. It tests whether you understand decon as a controlled system, not just a cleanup task. On the job A responder leaving the hot zone can carry contamination on gloves, boots, tools, hoses, and suit surfaces. If the decon line is rushed or out of order, the contamination problem simply moves from one zone to another. How to think about it Picture the movement from dirty to clean and ask what... Show more What this quiz covers This quiz is about decontamination procedures in hazardous operations: decon lines, zone control, removal sequence, contamination reduction, and preventing spread to clean areas. It tests whether you understand decon as a controlled system, not just a cleanup task. On the job A responder leaving the hot zone can carry contamination on gloves, boots, tools, hoses, and suit surfaces. If the decon line is rushed or out of order, the contamination problem simply moves from one zone to another. How to think about it Picture the movement from dirty to clean and ask what must be removed, rinsed, or isolated first. A common mistake is treating decon as optional after the “real work” is done. In exam questions, the right answer usually follows sequence, zone logic, and contamination control Show less
What this quiz covers This quiz is about decontamination procedures in hazardous operations: decon lines, zone control, removal sequence, contamination reduction, and preventing spread to clean areas. It tests whether you understand decon as a controlled system, not just a cleanup task.
On the job A responder leaving the hot zone can carry contamination on gloves, boots, tools, hoses, and suit surfaces. If the decon line is rushed or out of order, the contamination problem simply moves from one zone to another.
How to think about it Picture the movement from dirty to clean and ask what must be removed, rinsed, or isolated first. A common mistake is treating decon as optional after the “real work” is done. In exam questions, the right answer usually follows sequence, zone logic, and contamination control
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