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Acta Bio Medica : Atenei Parmensis logoLink to Acta Bio Medica : Atenei Parmensis
. 2020 Sep 7;91(3):e2020016. doi: 10.23750/abm.v91i3.10361

COVID-19: What happened to the healthcare workers of a research and teaching hospital in Milan, Italy?

Dario Consonni 1, Lorenzo Bordini 1, Carlo Nava 1, Aldo Todaro 1, Giovanna Lunghi 1, Andrea Lombardi 1, Davide Mangioni 1, Francesco De Palo 2, Lidia Guerrieri 2, Michele Gatti 2, Daniele Serra 2, Marco Polonioli 2, Simone Pratò 2, Antonio Muscatello 1, Alessandra Bandera 3, Francesco Auxilia 4,5, Silvana Castaldi 1,4,
PMCID: PMC7716960  PMID: 32921712

Abstract

The paper wants to present the data of infection of the Health Care Workers of a research and teaching hospital in Milan, Italy. The majority (2554, 55.9%) of 4572 HCWs were tested for SARS-CoV-2 and 8.8% were found positive. Most of the tested workers were women, but we found higher relative frequency of positivity for men, even after adjustment for age, working area, and occupation. The higher frequency of positive tests in the medicine area is probably explained by the higher concentration in that area of COVID-19 patients. Conversely, the low frequency of positive HCWs in intensive care units is probably explained by the diffuse and continuous use of PPD. Our results show that HCWs in a research and teaching hospital in the most hit Region in Italy had a similar pattern of infection as all other HCWs all over the world. The problem of SARS-CoV-2 infections among the hospital personnel HCWs should remind us the concerns about hospital acquired infections both for patients and HCWs. (www.actabiomedica.it)

Keywords: COVID-19 Health Care Workers Hospital


The epidemic of Corona Virus 19 disease (COVID-19) was declared as a pandemic at the beginning of the year 2020 (1).

In Italy, the Lombardy Region was one the most hit but according to the laws issued which closed all the schools, universities, shops, leisure and sport centres, all the Italian population was protected by the lockdown (2-7). The healthcare workers (HCWs) were the only part of the population together with all the other public services that continued to work. They had to care for patients affected by the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), often very serious ones especially from the end of February to the end of May.

To face the flow of patients who needed, very often, intensive care, hospitals turned many beds in intensive ones, stopped the elective activities and provided different pathways for emergency for positive COVID-19 patients and for the negative patients who needed to receive lifesaving treatments.

The health care workers had to face a new way of working, constantly wearing personal protection devices (PPD) and keeping a very high level of attention to avoid to be infected by SARS-CoV-2 (8,9). But it is indisputable they did a great job all over the world.

In a research and teaching hospital in the centre of Milan, Italy with 716 beds, 101 were devoted to intensive and subintensive care for COVID-19 patients and 5782 patients, from the end of February to the end of May, were admitted and many were SARS-CoV-2 positive (data from the hospital administrative records).

All HCWs at risk for infection, which is defined as a contact with a patient or another HCW with (or later diagnosed with) SARS-CoV-2 infection were tested with nasopharyngeal swab for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 (10).

We previously analysed results from February 24 to March 31, 2020 and found 139 workers with a positive test out of 1573 (8.8%) (11). In this study we extended the analyses as of July 8 and analysed the relative frequency of positive tests according to gender, age, working area, and occupation.

Materials and Methods

For viral detection two different methods were used. The first one employed Seegene Inc reagents (Seoul, Korea). RNA extraction was performed with STARMag Universal Cartridge kit on Nimbus instrument (Hamilton, Agrate Brianza, Italy) and amplification with Allplex® 2019-nCoV assay. The second one employed a GeneFinder® COVID-19 Plus RealAmp Kit (OSANG Healthcare, Anyangcheondong-ro, Dongan-gu, Anyang-si, Gyeonggi-do, Korea) on ELITech InGenius® instrument (Torino, Italy). Both assays identify the virus by multiplex rRT-PCR targeting three viral genes (E, RdRP and N).

For each worker, we determined the date of the first positive test (if any) and described the trend of positive tests over time. We compared frequency of workers with a positive nasopharyngeal test according to selected variables using chi-squared test. Then we calculated adjusted odds ratios (OR), and 95% confidence intervals (CI) of positivity with a multivariable logistic regression model including as covariates, gender, age class, working areas, and occupation. Statistical analysis was performed with Stata 16 (StataCorp. 2019).

Results

In the period from February 24 to July 8, 2020, 2554 HCWs out of 4572 employed in the hospital (data from the hospital administrative records) with mean age of 45.9 years, 1787 women and 767 men underwent one or more nasopharyngeal tests according to the National and Lombardy regional guidelines (12-14). The first positive test was on February 24, with peaks on March 10 (No. 11 workers with a positive test), March 11 (No. 12), and March 27 (No. 10) (Figure 1). There were 7 workers with a positive test in February, 119 in March, 67 in April, 11 in May, 2 in June, and none in July. The number of positive HCWs decreased in parallel with the slow-down of the epidemic in Lombardy Region (15).

Figure 1.

Figure 1.

Number of positive nasopharyngeal tests per day among healthcare workers in a research and teaching hospital in Milan, Italy, February 24 to July 8, 2020.

Overall, there were 206 workers with a positive tests out of 2554 (8.1%, 95% CI: 7.0-9.2) (Table 1). Men had a slightly higher frequency of positive tests (10.2%) than women (7.2%) and there was a weak inverse trend of positivity with increasing age. Medicine was the area with the larger frequency of workers with positive tests (9.4%), while intensive care units and the administrative and technical areas showed the lower frequencies (4.4% and 3.6%, respectively). Healthcare assistants were the occupational group with the highest frequency of positive workers (10.4%), while the lowest frequency was observed among clerical workers and technicians (4.0%).

Table 1.

Association between selected variables and frequency of positive nasopharyngeal tests among healthcare workers in a research and teaching hospital in Milan, Italy, February 24 to July 8, 2020.

Variable Workers Positive Test
N N % p-value* OR** 95% CI**
All 2554 206 8.1
Gender
Women 1787 128 7.2 0.01 1.00 Reference
Men 767 78 10.2 1.56 1.15-2.13
Age (years)
<30 220 21 9.5 0.65 1.00 Reference
30-39 625 56 9.0 0.93 0.54-1.59
40-49 587 47 8.0 0.83 0.47-1.45
50-59 820 62 7.6 0.79 0.46-1.35
60+ 302 20 6.6 0.62 0.31-1.21
Working area
Medicine 1086 102 9.4 0.06 1.52 0.42-5.50
Surgery 583 41 7.0 1.08 0.29-4.04
Technical and management services 635 53 8.3 1.36 0.38-4.88
Intensive care 113 5 4.4 0.62 0.13-3.00
Administrative, technical 137 5 3.6 1.00 Reference
Occupation
Physicians, including residents 632 55 8.7 0.07 2.04 0.78-5.29
Nurses, midwives 1054 81 7.7 1.74 0.68-4.43
Healthcare assistants 327 34 10.4 2.56 0.97-6.76
Health technicians*** 294 26 8.8 2.01 0.75-5.40
Clerical workers, technicians 247 10 4.0 1.00 Reference

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio.

*From chi-squared test. **From a multivariable logistic regression model including gender, age, working area, and occupation. ***Includes biologists, radiology and laboratory technicians, psychologists, other health technicians

In Figure 1 it is possible to see how the number of positive HCWs decreased according to the slow down of the epidemic in Lombardy Region (15).

Discussion

In a research and teaching hospital in the centre of Milan, the majority (2554, 55.9%) of 4572 HCWs were tested for SARS-CoV-2 and 8.8% were found positive. Most of the tested workers were women, but we found higher relative frequency of positivity for men, even after adjustment for age, working area, and occupation. The higher frequency of positive tests in the medicine area is probably explained by the higher concentration in that area of COVID-19 patients. Conversely, the low frequency of positive HCWs in intensive care units is probably explained by the diffuse and continuous use of PPD.

Our results show that HCWs in a research and teaching hospital in the most hit Region in Italy had a similar pattern of infection as all other HCWs all over the world (8,9).

The problem of SARS-CoV-2 infections among the hospital personnel HCWs should remind us the concerns about hospital acquired infections both for patients and HCWs (1624).

Conflict of interest:

Each author declares that he or she has no commercial associations (e.g. consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangement etc.) that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article

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