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Assessment of Healthcare Workers’ Levels of Preparedness and Awareness Regarding COVID-19 Infection in Low-Resource Settings

Authors :
Ayman Al-Agile
Marwa Biala
Majdi Badi
Mohammed Abdelkabir
Mohamed Ismaeil
Hala Bikhayr
Abdulaziz Zorgani
Moutaz Elgzairi
Abdelmunam Elharb
Muhammed Elhadi
Mohammed Alkeelani
Hamad Mughrabi
Bushray Almiqlash
Mohamed Eisay
Ahmed Msherghi
Malack Madi
Najah Ben Saleim
Abdulrahman Atewa
Moaz Alwarfalli
Tariq Boughididah
Jalal Ahmid
Taha Khaled
Ayiman Alhashimi
Rawanda Gaffaz
Sarah Alhaddad
Tahani Aleiyan
Belal Faraag
Ola Elmabrouk
Farah Madi
Hind Alameen
Hana Yahya
Ali Alsuyihili
Esra Alghanai
Hazim Ahmed
Ala Khaled
Siraj Abulmida
Sumayyah Bahroun
Malak Subhi
Amna Elmabrouk
Abdulmueti Alhadi
Anis Buzreg
Nafati Alnafati
Abraar Abdullah
Ahmed Elhadi
Ahmed Zaid
Fatimah Bin Alshiteewi
Fatima Elkhfeefi
Mawada Fadel
Esra Boushi
Samer Khel
Mohamed Abukhashem
Ala Amshai
Safeya Alkot
Source :
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2020.

Abstract

COVID-19, caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, is spreading rapidly worldwide, with devastating consequences for patients, healthcare workers, health systems, and economies. As it reaches low- and middle-income countries, the pandemic puts healthcare workers at high risk and challenges the abilities of healthcare systems to respond to the crisis. This study measured levels of knowledge and preparedness regarding COVID-19 among physicians and nurses. A cross-sectional survey was conducted among healthcare workers in Libya between February 26 and March 10, 2020. We obtained 1,572 valid responses of a possible 2,000 (78.6%) participants from 21 hospitals, of which 65.1% were from physicians and 34.9% from nurses. The majority of participants (70%) used social media as a source of information. A total of 47.3% of doctors and 54.7% of nurses received adequate training on how to effectively use personal protective equipment. Low confidence in managing suspected COVID-19 patients was reported by 83.8% of participants. Furthermore, 43.2% of healthcare workers were aware of proper hand hygiene techniques. Less than 7% of participants received training on how to manage COVID-19 cases, whereas 20.6% of doctors and 26.3% of nurses felt that they were personally prepared for the outbreak. Awareness and preparedness for the pandemic were low among frontline workers during the study. Therefore, an effective educational training program should be implemented to ensure maintenance of appropriate practices during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14761645 and 00029637
Volume :
103
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c3304ba785b95555c7e5d216df0eb46