Autor: |
Weber, Kurt D., Mower, William, Krishnadasan, Anusha, Mohr, Nicholas M., Montoy, Juan Carlos, Rodriguez, Robert M., Giordano, Philip A., Eyck, Patrick Ten, Harland, Karisa K., Wallace, Kelli, McDonald, Lawrence Clifford, Kutty, Preeta K., Hesse, Elisabeth M., Talan, David A., Bahamon, Monica, Carlson, Jestin N., Chisolm-Straker, Makini, Driver, Brian, Faine, Brett, Fuller, Brian M., Galbraith, James, Haran, John P., Higgins, Amanda, Hinson, Jeremiah, House, Stacey, Idris, Ahamed H., Kean, Efrat, Krebs, Elizabeth, Kurz, Michael C., Lee, Lilly, Liang, Stephen Y., Lim, Stephen C., Montoy, Juan Carlos, Rodriguez, Robert M., Moran, Gregory, Nandi, Utsav, Pathmarajah, Kavitha, Paxton, James H., Perez, Yesenia, Richardson, Lynne D., Rothman, Richard, Schrading, Walter A., Shuck, Jessica, Slev, Patricia, Smithline, Howard A., Romain, Michelle St., Souffront, Kimberly, Steele, Mark T., Stubbs, Amy, Swanson, Morgan B., Tiao, Josh, Torres, Jesus R., Trent, Stacy A., Uribe, Lisandra, Venkat, Arvind, Volturo, Gregory, Willey, James |
Zdroj: |
Annals of Emergency Medicine; 20240101, Issue: Preprints |
Abstrakt: |
In the early months of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and before vaccine availability, there were concerns that infected emergency department (ED) health care personnel could present a threat to the delivery of emergency medical care. We examined how the pandemic affected staffing levels and whether COVID-19 positive staff were potentially infectious at work in a cohort of US ED health care personnel in 2020. |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
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