英国COVID-19大流行期间医疗保健专业人员的在线调查:

I. Chakravorty, S. Daga, S. Dave, S. Chakravorty, N. Bhala, G. Menon, R. Mehta, J. Bamrah
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引用次数: 16

摘要

为了探讨医护人员、一系列医疗保健组织成员、政府机构和媒体对COVID-19相关问题的新关注,英国印度裔医生协会于2020年4月对医护人员进行了在线自我管理调查。结果受访者主要是医院医生(67%),年龄在40-60岁之间(72%),来自英国黑人、亚洲人和少数民族(BAME)背景(86%)。30%的受访者有一种或多种易受伤害的合并症。超过78%的受访者表示缺乏或不适当的个人防护装备(PPE), 68%的受访者认为他们无法遵守或在工作(包括通勤)中坚持保持社交距离是不切实际的。在调查时,18.5%的受访者报告确诊或疑似诊断为COVID-19。在多因素分析中,经混杂因素调整后,BAME社区成为COVID-19的独立风险因素(OR 1.45)。这些结果增加了国际上对BAME种族似乎具有更高患COVID-19风险的观察所表达的担忧。这是第一个调整工作相关因素(无法保持社交距离和个人防护装备不足)和合并症的研究。我们的工作支持设计和开展更大规模的紧急研究的必要性,以了解这一风险,并计划适当减轻卫生保健工作者面临的风险
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Online Survey of Healthcare Professionals in the COVID-19 Pandemic in the UK:
To explore the emerging concerns of COVID-19 related issues amongst health care workers, members of a range of healthcare organisations, governmental agencies, and the media, and online self-administered survey of healthcare workers was undertaken by the British Association of Physicians of Indian Origin in April 2020. Results The respondents were predominantly hospital doctors (67%), aged between 40-60 years (72%) and from Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnicity (BAME) backgrounds in the UK (86%). Thirty percent of respondents had one or more vulnerable comorbidities. Over 78% reported either lack of, or inappropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for their role and 68% of respondents felt that they were unable to comply with or that it was impractical to adhere to social distancing at work (including commuting). At the time of the survey, 18.5% of respondents reported having a confirmed or suspected diagnosis of COVID-19. In multivariate analysis, the BAME community emerged as an independent risk factor (OR 1.45) for COVID-19 when adjusted for confounding factors. Conclusions These results add to the emerging concerns expressed internationally on the observation that BAME ethnicity appears to have a higher risk of developing COVID-19. This is the first study that adjusted work-related factors (inability to maintain social distancing and inadequate PPE) and comorbidities. Our work supports the imperative for designing and conducting urgent larger studies to understand this risk and plan appropriate mitigation of the risks to health care workers
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