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Incidence, Prevalence, and Sources of COVID-19 Infection among Healthcare Workers in Hospitals in Malaysia

The COVID-19 pandemic introduced significant novel risks for healthcare workers and healthcare services. This study aimed to determine the prevalence, trends, characteristics, and sources of COVID-19 infection among healthcare workers during the early COVID-19 pandemic in Malaysian hospitals. A cros...

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Published in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2022-09, Vol.19 (19), p.12485
Main Authors: Harith, Abdul Aziz, Ab Gani, Mohd Hafiz, Griffiths, Robin, Abdul Hadi, Azlihanis, Abu Bakar, Nor Aishah, Myers, Julia, Mahjom, Maznieda, Robat, Rosnawati Muhamad, Zubir, Muhammad Zulfakhar
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creator Harith, Abdul Aziz
Ab Gani, Mohd Hafiz
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Robat, Rosnawati Muhamad
Zubir, Muhammad Zulfakhar
description The COVID-19 pandemic introduced significant novel risks for healthcare workers and healthcare services. This study aimed to determine the prevalence, trends, characteristics, and sources of COVID-19 infection among healthcare workers during the early COVID-19 pandemic in Malaysian hospitals. A cross-sectional study used secondary data collected from a COVID-19 surveillance system for healthcare workers between January and December 2020. Two surges in COVID-19 cases among healthcare workers in Malaysia were epidemiologically correlated to a similarly intense COVID-19 pattern of transmission in the community. The period prevalence of COVID-19 infection and the mortality rate among healthcare workers in Malaysia were 1.03% and 0.0019%, respectively. The majority of infections originated from the workplace (53.3%); a total of 36.3% occurred among staff; a total of 17.0% occurred between patients and staff; and 43.2% originated from the community. Healthcare workers had a 2.9 times higher incidence risk ratio for the acquisition of COVID-19 infection than the general population. Nursing professionals were the most highly infected occupational group (40.5%), followed by medical doctors and specialists (24.1%), and healthcare assistants (9.7%). The top three departments registering COVID-19 infections were the medical department (23.3%), the emergency department (17.7%), and hospital administration and governance (9.1%). Occupational safety and health units need to be vigilant for the early detection of a disease outbreak to prevent the avoidable spread of disease in high-risk settings. The transformation of some tertiary hospitals to dedicated COVID-19 care, the monitoring of new procedures for the management of COVID-19 patients, and appropriate resource allocation are key to successful risk mitigation strategies.
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subjects Coronaviruses
COVID-19
COVID-19 - epidemiology
Cross-Sectional Studies
Emergency medical care
Emergency medical services
Epidemiology
Health care
Health Personnel
Health risks
Health services
Hospitals
Humans
Incidence
Infections
Malaysia - epidemiology
Medical personnel
Occupational safety
Pandemics
Pandemics - prevention & control
Patients
Prevalence
Resource allocation
Risk
Surveillance systems
title Incidence, Prevalence, and Sources of COVID-19 Infection among Healthcare Workers in Hospitals in Malaysia
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