1. Demographic and occupational determinants of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG seropositivity in hospital staff.
- Author
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Martin, Christopher A, Patel, Prashanth, Goss, Charles, Jenkins, David R, Price, Arthur, Barton, Linda, Gupta, Pankaj, Zaccardi, Francesco, Jerina, Helen, Duraisingham, Sai, Brunskill, Nigel J, Khunti, Kamlesh, and Pareek, Manish
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,SEROPREVALENCE ,MEDICINE ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,MINORITIES ,COVID-19 ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PARTICIPATION ,CROSS-sectional method ,BLACK people ,SERODIAGNOSIS ,MANN Whitney U Test ,QUALITY of life ,NURSES ,CHI-squared test ,RESEARCH funding ,ETHNIC groups ,VIRAL antibodies ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,WHITE people ,COVID-19 testing ,ODDS ratio ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background Although evidence suggests that demographic characteristics including minority ethnicity increase the risk of infection with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), it is unclear whether these characteristics, together with occupational factors, influence anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG seroprevalence in hospital staff. Methods We conducted cross-sectional surveillance examining seroprevalence of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG amongst staff at University Hospitals of Leicester (UHL) NHS Trust. We quantified seroprevalence stratified by ethnicity, occupation and seniority of practitioner and used logistic regression to examine demographic and occupational factors associated with seropositivity. Results A total of 1148/10662 (10.8%) hospital staff members were seropositive. Compared to White staff (seroprevalence 9.1%), seroprevalence was higher in South Asian (12.3%) and Black (21.2%) staff. The occupations and department with the highest seroprevalence were nurses/healthcare assistants (13.7%) and the Emergency Department (ED)/Acute Medicine (17.5%), respectively. Seroprevalence decreased with seniority in medical/nursing practitioners. Minority ethnicity was associated with seropositivity on an adjusted analysis (South Asian: aOR 1.26; 95%CI: 1.07–1.49 and Black: 2.42; 1.90–3.09). Anaesthetics/ICU staff members were less likely to be seropositive than ED/Acute medicine staff (0.41; 0.27–0.61). Conclusions Ethnicity and occupational factors, including specialty and seniority, are associated with seropositivity for anti-SARS-Cov-2 IgG. These findings could be used to inform occupational risk assessments for front-line healthcare workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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