关于巴西 SARS-CoV-2 大流行头几个月期间医护人员个人防护设备使用、培训和生物安全准备情况的横断面研究

Kerstin Muner, Julia Kilgour, Tatiana Ometto, Ana Pérola Drulla Brandão, Andrea Pires dos Santos, Ana Marcia Sá Guimarães
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摘要

巴西医护人员(HCWs)中 COVID-19 和结核病的发病率很高。个人防护设备(PPE)对保护他们至关重要。我们的目的是对巴西 SARS-CoV-2 大流行初期医护人员的个人防护设备使用、培训和准备情况进行评估。我们通过一个提供个人防护设备指南的网站向医护人员发放问卷,进行了一项横断面研究。通过χ2检验和稳健泊松回归,确定了与医治COVID-19患者(TCOVID-19)、缺乏个人防护设备使用培训和重复使用N95呼吸器的医务工作者相关的因素。我们对 2020 年 4 月至 7 月收集的代表巴西 526 个城市的 1410 份问卷进行了分析。与非TCOVID-19患者的HCW相比,TCOVID-19患者的工作年限较短,更有可能重复使用个人防护设备,并报告了更高的压力水平和更低的工作场所生物安全性。医务工作者普遍存在恐惧心理、获得个人防护设备的机会有限以及对大流行缺乏准备。缺乏个人防护设备培训与职业和未进行 N95 呼吸器密合度测试有关。在大流行期间重复使用 N95 呼吸器的人占 78%,这与大流行期间重复使用个人防护设备和大流行前重复使用 N95 呼吸器有关。重复使用 N95 是一种既定做法。在应对空气传播病原体方面长期缺乏准备,可能是导致高危职业工人中结核病和 COVID-19 感染率居全球前列的原因之一。
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Cross-sectional study of personal protective equipment use, training and biosafety preparedness among healthcare workers during the first months of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in Brazil
Brazil has high rates of COVID-19 and tuberculosis among healthcare workers (HCWs). Personal protective equipment (PPE) is essential for their protection. We aimed to evaluate PPE use, training, and preparedness among HCWs in the early months of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in Brazil.A cross-sectional study was performed using questionnaires available to HCWs through a website created to provide PPE guidelines. χ2test and robust Poisson regression identified factors associated with HCWs treating COVID-19 patients (TCOVID-19), lack of training on PPE use and N95 respirator reuse. The speech content of open-ended questions was analysed.We analysed 1410 questionnaires collected from April to July 2020 representing 526 Brazilian cities. HCWs-TCOVID-19 had fewer years of work experience, were more likely to reuse PPE, and reported higher stress levels and lower biosafety at the workplace than HCWs not TCOVID-19 patients. Fearful concerns, limited PPE access and pandemic unpreparedness were common among HCWs. Lack of PPE training was associated with the profession and no N95 respirator fit tests. N95 reuse during the pandemic, common to 78% of the HCWs, was associated with the reuse of PPE during the pandemic and reuse of N95 before the pandemic.We report the unpreparedness of HCWs and institutions to handle the pandemic, with low rates of training and N95 respirator fit testing and high PPE reuse. N95 reuse was a pre-established practice. This chronic unpreparedness to deal with airborne pathogens may have contributed to one of the highest global rates of tuberculosis and COVID-19 among HCWs.
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