Semantic Scholar Open Access 2020 568 sitasi

Infection and mortality of healthcare workers worldwide from COVID-19: a systematic review

S. Bandyopadhyay R. Baticulon Murtaza Kadhum M. Alser D. Ojuka +59 lainnya

Abstrak

Objectives To estimate COVID-19 infections and deaths in healthcare workers (HCWs) from a global perspective during the early phases of the pandemic. Design Systematic review. Methods Two parallel searches of academic bibliographic databases and grey literature were undertaken until 8 May 2020. Governments were also contacted for further information where possible. There were no restrictions on language, information sources used, publication status and types of sources of evidence. The AACODS checklist or the National Institutes of Health study quality assessment tools were used to appraise each source of evidence. Outcome measures Publication characteristics, country-specific data points, COVID-19-specific data, demographics of affected HCWs and public health measures employed. Results A total of 152 888 infections and 1413 deaths were reported. Infections were mainly in women (71.6%, n=14 058) and nurses (38.6%, n=10 706), but deaths were mainly in men (70.8%, n=550) and doctors (51.4%, n=525). Limited data suggested that general practitioners and mental health nurses were the highest risk specialities for deaths. There were 37.2 deaths reported per 100 infections for HCWs aged over 70 years. Europe had the highest absolute numbers of reported infections (119 628) and deaths (712), but the Eastern Mediterranean region had the highest number of reported deaths per 100 infections (5.7). Conclusions COVID-19 infections and deaths among HCWs follow that of the general population around the world. The reasons for gender and specialty differences require further exploration, as do the low rates reported in Africa and India. Although physicians working in certain specialities may be considered high risk due to exposure to oronasal secretions, the risk to other specialities must not be underestimated. Elderly HCWs may require assigning to less risky settings such as telemedicine or administrative positions. Our pragmatic approach provides general trends, and highlights the need for universal guidelines for testing and reporting of infections in HCWs.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (64)

S

S. Bandyopadhyay

R

R. Baticulon

M

Murtaza Kadhum

M

M. Alser

D

D. Ojuka

Y

Yara Badereddin

A

Archith Kamath

S

S. Parepalli

G

Grace Brown

S

Sara Iharchane

S

S. Gandino

Z

Zara Markovic-Obiago

S

Samuel Scott

E

E. Manirambona

A

A. Machhada

A

A. Aggarwal

L

Lydia Benazaize

M

M. Ibrahim

D

David S Kim

I

Isabel Tol

E

E. Taylor

A

A. Knighton

D

Dorothy Bbaale

D

Duha Jasim

H

H. Alghoul

H

Henna Reddy

H

Hibatullah Abuelgasim

K

K. Saini

A

A. Sigler

L

Leenah Abuelgasim

M

M. Moran-Romero

M

Mary Kumarendran

N

Najlaa abu Jamie

O

Omaima Ali

R

R. Sudarshan

R

Riley A. Dean

R

Rumi Kissyova

S

S. Kelzang

S

S. Roche

T

T. Ahsan

Y

Yethrib Mohamed

A

A. Dube

G

G. Gwini

R

R. Gwokyala

R

Robin Brown

M

M. Papon

Z

Zoe Li

S

Salvador Sun Ruzats

S

Somy Charuvila

N

N. Peter

K

Khalil Khalidy

N

Nkosikhona Moyo

O

O. Alser

A

Arielis Solano

E

E. Robles-Pérez

A

Aiman Tariq

M

M. Gaddah

S

S. Kolovos

F

Faith C. Muchemwa

A

A. Saleh

A

A. Gosman

R

R. Pinedo-Villanueva

A

A. Jani

R

R. Khundkar

Format Sitasi

Bandyopadhyay, S., Baticulon, R., Kadhum, M., Alser, M., Ojuka, D., Badereddin, Y. et al. (2020). Infection and mortality of healthcare workers worldwide from COVID-19: a systematic review. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003097

Akses Cepat

Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003097
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2020
Bahasa
en
Total Sitasi
568×
Sumber Database
Semantic Scholar
DOI
10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003097
Akses
Open Access ✓