Investigation of protective exposure risk events in nurses against corona virus disease 2019 in Wuhan.
- Author:
Qiu WANG
1
;
Jin Yu GUO
1
;
Hong SUN
1
;
Ling WANG
2
;
Ju Su YING
2
;
Hui Xin LIU
3
Author Information
1. Department of Emergency, Peking University People's Hospital, Beijing 100034, China.
2. Department of Nursing, Peking University People's Hospital, Beijing 100034, China.
3. Office of Academic Research, Peking University People's Hospital, Beijing 100034, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
COVID-19;
Coronavirus infections;
Nurses;
Personal protective equipment;
Pneumonia, Viral
- MeSH:
Betacoronavirus;
COVID-19;
China;
Coronavirus Infections/transmission*;
Ear Protective Devices;
Humans;
Male;
Occupational Exposure/prevention & control*;
Pandemics/prevention & control*;
Pneumonia, Viral/transmission*;
Risk Factors;
SARS-CoV-2
- From:
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences)
2020;52(4):711-714
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE:To investigate the current situation of virus exposure risk incidents of nurses against corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Wuhan, and to provide reference evidence for nursing managers to protect nursing staff who were working in the isolation ward.
METHODS:In the study, 308 nursing staff against COVID-19 working in the isolation ward in Wuhan were conveniently selected to participate in the investigation. The designed questionnaires including 7 kinds of protective exposure risk events were made by the team of researchers on the basis of literature review and interview with the nurses in Wuhan. All the participants recalled their working experience in the status of dressing in personal protective equipment and filled in the questionnaires online by WeChat according to the same instruction.
RESULTS:The questionnaires were filled in validly by a total of 304 nursing staff, of whom 88.8% received emergency training on the prevention and dealing measurement of exposure risk events. The incidence of shoe cover contamination, falling off or torn was relatively high, about 53.6%. Due to the protection of gloves, the incidence of hand or skin contamination was relatively low, about 14.1%. The most nervousness of protective exposure risk event for nurses was N95 mask contamination, falling off or shifting, with a score of 8.2±2.3, showing a higher psychiatric burden. Single factor analysis found that the number of days in Wuhan was different, the number of the types of protective risk events occurred was different (χ2=14.562, P=0.024), orderly multivariate Logistic regression found that men were the independent protective factor for the number of the types of protective exposure risk events that occurred (P=0.019).
CONCLUSION:Protective exposure risk events may occur in the work of nursing staff working in the isolation ward in Wuhan. It is necessary to guide nurses to prevent the occurrence of protective exposure risk events and effectively deal with them, so as to prevent virus exposure and reduce psycholo-gical burden.