The impact of COVID-19 on healthcare workers: risk factors, sources of infection, and sickness absenteeism
Ezgi GÜLTEN, Güle ÇINAR, İrem AKDEMİR, Elif Mukime SARICAOĞLU, İlkay TAŞDAN, Emine ATMACA, Sibel KAYMAKÇI, Fatma ŞANAL, Dilek Sevim AKDAŞ, Arzu BÜYÜM, Gülşah KOCAALİ, Safiye TARAKÇI, Atilla Halil ELHAN, Mehmet Serhat BİRENGEL, Kemal Osman MEMİKOĞLU, Alpay AZAP

TL;DR
This study examines how healthcare workers in Turkey were affected by COVID-19, including infection sources, risk factors, and work absences.
Contribution
The study provides insights into infection sources and risk factors among healthcare workers with SARS-CoV-2, emphasizing the need for improved infection control and vaccination strategies.
Findings
35.4% of infections were community-acquired, while 24.9% were from colleagues and 7.2% from patients.
73.7% of healthcare workers missed timely vaccination opportunities, and 4.1% were hospitalized.
Sickness absenteeism totaled 23,454 days, exceeding expected losses by 2891 days.
Abstract
Healthcare workers (HCWs) face increased risks of COVID-19 infection due to occupational exposure. Understanding infection sources, risk factors, and workforce losses is crucial for mitigating these impacts in future pandemics. This study aimed to evaluate the risk factors, infection sources, and sickness absenteeism among HCWs diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection, providing insights to enhance infection control strategies. The study included 2153 HCWs diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 between March 2020 and February 2023 at a tertiary care hospital in Türkiye. Demographic, clinical, and professional characteristics, personal protective equipment (PPE) usage, infection sources, and vaccination data were analyzed. Statistical analyses were conducted using the R programming language. Among infected HCWs, 68.5% were female, and nurses accounted for 39.4% of cases. PPE compliance was significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfection Control and Ventilation · COVID-19 and Mental Health · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research
