New Guide for for Verification of a Conformity Assessment Supporting Nitrile Gloves Supply Chain
1. Scope
1.1 This document is proposed as a Guide under ASTM definitions. It provides methodologies and recommended practices (“should” guidance rather than mandatory “shall” requirements) for establishing end-to-end traceability of nitrile gloves from raw material sourcing through production, packaging, and distribution. The Guide focuses on document-based verification, including the tracking of certificates, lot codes, and related records, and does not prescribe specific manufacturing process controls or material test methods, which remain governed by existing ASTM, ISO, and FDA standards.
1.2 This Guide provides a technology-neutral and outcome-oriented framework. It defines what information and capabilities should be in place to verify supply chain claims but allows flexibility in how organizations implement traceability and authentication practices. Examples include the use of blockchain or traditional databases for recordkeeping, and QR codes or RFID for physical identifier systems.
1.3 This Guide outlines recommended practices to trace nitrile glove production from base chemical feedstocks through manufacturing and distribution. Traceability includes mapping material flows, documenting each transformation step, and establishing a transparent, auditable chain-of-custody for each batch of gloves.
1.4 This Guide provides recommended practices for authenticating critical documents and supply chain components using tamper-evident techniques such as secure Certificates of Analysis and digital signatures. These practices support the confirmation of product legitimacy and document integrity prior to import, export, or downstream distribution.
1.5 This Guide outlines a verification process for comparing supply chain records against business logic and compliance criteria. Verification includes identifying anomalies or inconsistencies that may indicate fraud or non-compliance, such as mismatches between declared origin and procurement data, incomplete production records, or test results outside expected ranges.
1.6 This Guide establishes recommended oversight practices for regulators and accredited third parties, including inspections, laboratory testing, and digital system audits. These activities support continuous monitoring of compliance with the traceability and authentication requirements described in this Guide.
Keywords
PPE, Nitrile Gloves, Supply Chain Traceability, Certificate of Analysis (COA), Certificate of Conformance (COC), Made in America, Compliance, Counterfeit Prevention, Documentation Verification, Conformity Assessment, FDA 510(k), ISO 13485, Blockchain, Forced Labor, UFLPA Compliance
Rationale
The purpose of this Guide is to provide a structured and verifiable framework that fills the current gap in supply chain traceability and authenticity for nitrile gloves. While performance standards establish how gloves should behave in use, they do not address origin claims, documentation integrity, or forced labor risks. Recent enforcement actions and supply chain failures have shown that these gaps can lead to counterfeit products, misrepresented origins, and gloves manufactured under prohibited labor conditions entering global markets. By outlining a conformity assessment model that verifies traceability, documentation, and compliance, this Guide aims to reduce fraud, improve transparency, support regulatory enforcement, and help ensure that nitrile gloves delivered into healthcare and industrial environments are authentic, compliant, and ethically sourced.
The scope of this guide does not include wood-derived products.