International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jan 2021)

COVID-19 hospital outbreaks: Protecting healthcare workers to protect frail patients. An Italian observational cohort study

  • Luigi Vimercati,
  • Luigi De Maria,
  • Marco Quarato,
  • Antonio Caputi,
  • Pasquale Stefanizzi,
  • Loreto Gesualdo,
  • Giovanni Migliore,
  • Fulvio Italo Maria Fucilli,
  • Domenica Cavone,
  • Maria Celeste Delfino,
  • Stefania Sponselli,
  • Maria Chironna,
  • Silvio Tafuri

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102
pp. 532 – 537

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: To determine the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infection among exposed healthcare workers (HCWs) after preventive protocol implementation. Methods: A total of 5750 HCWs were included in the study. Those in contact with COVID-19 patients were allocated into a high-risk or a low-risk group based on contact type (PPE- or non-PPE-protected); high-risk workers underwent nasopharyngeal swab tests, while among low-risk workers, swab tests were carried out only for symptomatic workers (active surveillance).The prevalence was determined by real-time reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction on nasopharyngeal samples. Results: 3570 HCWs had contact with 1065 COVID-19 patients. Among them, 3494 were subjected to active surveillance (low-risk group); 2886 (82.60%) were subjected to a swab test; and 15 were positive (0.52%). Seventy-six HCWs (2.13% of exposed) were included in the high-risk group, and a swab test was mandatory for each participant. Overall, 66 (86.84% of high-risk) were negative, and 10 were positive (13.16%), resulting in a higher risk of infection than in the low-risk group [OR = 29.00; 95% CI:12.56-66.94; p < 0.0001]. Conclusion: To date, the SARS-CoV-2 infection prevalence is 0.70% among exposed HCWs and 0.435% among all HCWs working at the examined university hospital. The correct use of PPE and the early identification of symptomatic workers are essential factors to avoiding nosocomial clusters.

Keywords