Abstract

Ensuring the safety of healthcare workers is vital to overcome the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. We here present an analysis of the social interactions between the healthcare workers at hospitals and nursing homes. Using data from an automated hand hygiene system, we inferred social interactions between healthcare workers to identify transmission paths of infection in hospitals and nursing homes. A majority of social interactions occurred in medication rooms and kitchens emphasising that health-care workers should be especially aware of following the infection prevention guidelines in these places. Using epidemiology simulations of disease at the locations, we found no need to quarantine all healthcare workers at work with a contagious colleague. Only 14.1% and 24.2% of the health-care workers in the hospitals and nursing homes are potentially infected when we disregard hand sanitization and assume the disease is very infectious. Based on our simulations, we observe a 41% and 26% reduction in the number of infected healthcare workers at the hospital and nursing home, when we assume that hand sanitization reduces the spread by 20% from people to people and 99% from people to objects. The analysis and results presented here forms a basis for future research to explore the potential of a fully automated contact tracing systems.

Highlights

  • During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the safety of healthcare workers (HCWs) is of great importance to secure a functional level of staffing at hospitals and nursing homes

  • The system observed 89791 hand hygiene opportunities from the hospital wards and 18590 hand hygiene opportunities from the nursing home facility, which resulted in 17008 encounters (HCW interactions) at the hospital and 4717 encounters at the nursing home

  • We have analysed the social interactions and risk factors which are relevant to the spread of infectious diseases at hospitals and nursing homes

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Summary

Introduction

During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the safety of healthcare workers (HCWs) is of great importance to secure a functional level of staffing at hospitals and nursing homes. HCWs are at high risk of SARS-CoV-2 exposure through direct or indirect contact with infected patients, colleagues or equipment [1, 2]. With the upsurge in hospital admissions, this pandemic is threatening to leave some healthcare systems overstretched and unable to operate effectively [3]. One effective method to reduce the risk of transmission is effective and timely contact tracing [4,5,6,7] which allows for containment of the pathogen by isolating potentially infected. Analysis of social interactions relevant to the spread of infectious diseases at hospitals and nursing homes

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