Black healthcare workers at highest risk of contracting COVID-19

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A US study of more than 10,000 healthcare workers found black workers were at higher risk of contracting COVID-19 than their non-black colleagues, even non-black workers who had been exposed to the virus at work. They also found workers who had been in contact with a confirmed or suspected COVID-19-positive case outside the workplace were more likely to catch COVID-19 than those exposed at work. These disparities must be considered when examining workplace COVID-19 risk, the authors say. 

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From: American College of Physicians

Study finds Black race higher risk factor for COVID-19 infection than occupational exposure

A large survey of health care workers found that community and demographic factors, such as contact with a confirmed or suspected COVID-19-positive case outside the workplace and Black race, were stronger predictors of COVID-19 infection than occupational exposure. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine. Read the full text.

Researchers from Emory University Medical School and Rollins School of Public Health fitted a logistic regression model to data from a cross-sectional survey of health care workers conducted from April to June 2020 within their health care system to quantify occupational, community, and demographic risk factors for SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity. The researchers found an overall SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence of 3.8% among the health care workers after the initial surge of the epidemic. After adjusting for possible bias due to voluntary participation in testing, Black race was still a stronger predictor of infection than workplace exposure.

The researchers explain that racial disparities, now well documented in the general population, extend to health care workers after accounting for other risk factors including job role and workplace COVID-19 exposure, underscoring the fundamental societal inequities that have become a hallmark of the COVID-19 pandemic. These disparities must be considered when examining workplace COVID-19 risk. While the authors adjusted for community risk by including ZIP code–level COVID-19 incidence in the model, they could not account for more proximal factors that may have contributed to higher risk for infection among Black health care workers, including higher likelihood of exposure at home or use of public transportation.

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Research American College of Physicians, Web page
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Annals of Internal Medicine
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Organisation/s: Emory University, USA
Funder: Emory COVID-19 Response Collaborative.
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