Social mixing patterns of United States healthcare personnel at a quaternary health center: a prospective observational study
Lauren Pischel, Obianuju G Aguolu, Noureen Ahmed, Melissa M Campbell, Ryan Borg, Chelsea Duckwall, Kathryn Willebrand, Agnieska Zaleski, Elliott E Paintsil, M. Catherine Muenker, Amyn A Malik, Moses C Kiti, Joshua L Warren, Samuel M Jenness, Ben A Lopman, Justin Belsky

TL;DR
This study examines how healthcare workers interact with others at work, finding that their contact patterns remain stable even during the pandemic.
Contribution
The study provides detailed, longitudinal data on healthcare workers' contact patterns and generates age-stratified contact matrices.
Findings
Healthcare workers had a median of 15 daily contacts, with slight increases over time.
Healthcare workers were 2.8 times more likely to contact other HCP than patients.
Contact patterns were stable despite changes in societal behavior during the pandemic.
Abstract
Understanding healthcare personnel’s (HCP) contact patterns are important to mitigate healthcare-associated infectious disease transmission. Little is known about how HCP contact patterns change over time or during outbreaks such as the COVID-19 pandemic. This study in a large United States healthcare system examined the social contact patterns of HCP via standardized social contact diaries. HCP were enrolled from October 2020 to June 2022. Participants completed monthly surveys of social contacts during a representative working day. In June 2022, participants completed a 2-day individual-level contact diary. Regression models estimated the association between contact rates and job type. We generated age-stratified contact matrices. Three-hundred and sixty HCP enrolled, 157 completed one or more monthly contact diaries and 88 completed the intensive 2-day diary. In the monthly contact…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studies · Viral Infections and Outbreaks Research · COVID-19 and Mental Health
