Implementation of a COVID-19 surveillance programme for healthcare workers in a teaching hospital in an upper-middle-income country
Creators
-
Kim Sui Wan1
- Peter Seah Keng Tok1
- Kishwen Kanna Yoga Ratnam1
- Nuraini Aziz1
- Marzuki Isahak1
- Rafdzah Ahmad Zaki1
- Nik Daliana Nik Farid1
- Noran Naqiah Hairi1
- Sanjay Rampal1
- Chiu-Wan Ng1
- Mohd Fauzy Samsudin1
- Vinura Venugopal1
- Mohammad Asyraf1
- Narisa Hatun Damanhuri1
- Sanpagavalli Doraimuthu1
- Catherine Thamarai Arumugam1
- Thaneswaran Marthammuthu1
- Fathhullah Azmie Nawawi1
- Faiz Baharudin1
-
Diane Woei Quan Chong1
-
Vivek Jason Jayaraj1
- Venna Magarita2
- Sasheela Ponnampalavanar2
- Nazirah Hasnan2
- Adeeba Kamarulzaman2
- Mas Ayu Said1
- 1. Centre for Epidemiology and Evidence-Based Practice, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- 2. University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Description
Introduction The reporting of Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19) mortality among healthcare workers highlights their vulnerability in managing the COVID-19 pandemic. Some low- and middle-income countries have highlighted the challenges with COVID-19 testing, such as inadequate capacity, untrained laboratory personnel, and inadequate funding. This article describes the components and implementation of a healthcare worker surveillance programme in a designated COVID-19 teaching hospital in Malaysia. In addition, the distribution and characteristics of healthcare workers placed under surveillance are described.
Material and methods A COVID-19 healthcare worker surveillance programme was implemented in University Malaya Medical Centre. The programme involved four teams: contact tracing, risk assessment, surveillance and outbreak investigation. Daily symptom surveillance was conducted over fourteen days for healthcare workers who were assessed to have low-, moderate- and high-risk of contracting COVID-19. A cross-sectional analysis was conducted for data collected over 24 weeks, from the 6th of March 2020 to the 20th of August 2020.
Results A total of 1,174 healthcare workers were placed under surveillance. The majority were females (71.6%), aged between 25 and 34 years old (64.7%), were nursing staff (46.9%) and had no comorbidities (88.8%). A total of 70.9% were categorised as low-risk, 25.7% were moderate-risk, and 3.4% were at high risk of contracting COVID-19. One-third (35.2%) were symptomatic, with the sore throat (23.6%), cough (19.8%) and fever (5.0%) being the most commonly reported symptoms. A total of 17 healthcare workers tested positive for COVID-19, with a prevalence of 0.3% among all the healthcare workers. Risk category and presence of symptoms were associated with a positive COVID-19 test (p<0.001). Fever (p<0.001), cough (p = 0.003), shortness of breath (p = 0.015) and sore throat (p = 0.002) were associated with case positivity.
Conclusion COVID-19 symptom surveillance and risk-based assessment have merits to be included in a healthcare worker surveillance programme to safeguard the health of the workforce.
Files
journal.pone.0249394.pdf
Files
(1.1 MB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:a14c85d72e712a5a0d9b2045da5c7c2d
|
1.1 MB | Preview Download |