It is generally considered that coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) should be recognised as occupational health disorder in workers who are at higher occupational risk of infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) than the general population (1, 2), especially in view of Annex I, entry No. 407 of the
Healthcare workers belong to the group of so-called
At the beginning of the pandemic, in May 2020, the Croatian Society of Occupational Health (CSOH) prepared the guidelines for reporting COVID-19 as occupational disease (9) and suggested a diagnostic protocol for recognising occupational COVID-19. The diagnostic procedure, according to the guidelines, begins with the verification of medical documents confirming COVID-19 in a patient and documents confirming that the established COVID-19 is associated with increased occupational risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. The guidelines also specify which documents need to be submitted: positive laboratory test results, clinical findings, and occupational, medical, and epidemiological history or occupational risk assessment. The procedure to be completed requires good cooperation between the diseased HCW, employer, and occupational health physician (OHP). This Croatian guideline is fully in line with the later published
The aim of our study was to see how this procedure had been carried out in practice on a sample of HCWs from all over Croatia.
This study was part of a larger on-going survey collecting data from active Croatian HCWs who were SARS-CoV-2-positive during the COVID-19 pandemic and who contacted their OHP to recognise the infection as occupational disease between 1 May 2020 and 10 March 2021. Preliminary results from this survey analysing clinical characteristics of work-related COVID-19 were published earlier (10). This study included 100 Croatian HCWs from eight of the twenty-one Croatian counties, aged 18 to 65 years, who were isolated due to known close contact with a patient or colleague who had COVID-19 or with contagious biological material contaminated with SARS-CoV-2.
Our collaborating OHPs who assessed workplace risk by taking their occupational history invited them to participate in the study and informed them about our online Occupational COVID-19 in Healthcare Workers Questionnaire. We compiled the questionnaire in Microsoft Forms® and sent the link to OHPs via e-mail, who forwarded the link to their patients. Participants filled in their age, sex, job, affiliation, and number of days after they tested SARS-CoV-2-positive for the first time. For the purpose of this study, we used a multiple-choice question about the type of close contact at the workplace (infected patient, infected colleague, contagious biological material contaminated with SARS-CoV-2), a yes/no question about having COVID-19 symptoms during isolation, and a question asking participants to check which of the supporting documentation on the list (in line with the CSOH guidelines) they did submit to their OHP (9). For the purpose of this study, we grouped the documents into two categories: basic (obligatory for diagnosing COVID-19 as occupational disease) and supplementary. Basic documentation included medical report(s) about COVID-19 [patient history confirming the diagnosis of COVID-19 and positive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test report], job description, and employer statement about occupational exposure to SARS-CoV-2. Supplementary documentation intended to help distinguish occupational from non-occupational exposure to SARS-CoV-2 included history of other diseases issued by a family physician, statement about which personal protective equipment (PPE) was used in which circumstances, a list of work-related tasks, days spent away from work (including isolation, sick leave, other leave days or business travel), workplace risk assessment by occupational safety experts, and business and personal travel statement.
The study was approved by the ethics committees of the Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health (approval No. 100-21/20-19, class: 01-18/20-02-2/1) and Zagreb University School of Medicine (approval No. 380-59-10106-20-111/160, class: 641-07/20-02/01). All participants were included in the study after they signed informed consent which contained a GDPR statement.
The results were analysed with descriptive statistics using medians for continuous data and counts and percentages for categorical data. Differences between affiliations were analysed with Fisher’s exact test (for categorical variables) to obtain odds ratios (ORs) with 95 % confidential intervals (95 % CIs). All P values below 0.05 were considered significant. All statistics were run on IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, version 25.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA).
Table 1 shows general and epidemiological data about study participants (N=100). Most worked in hospitals (N=95) and were nurses (N=70). On average, they reported COVID-19 to their OHP 28.5 (interquartile range 1.3–45.0) days after they tested SARS-CoV-2-positive for the first time. Most were infected by a patient (N=68), and of those 59 used recommended PPE, while eight did not have it available, and one did not know which PPE was recommended. During isolation, most participants (N=87) had COVID-19 symptoms.
General and epidemiological characteristics of study participants (N=100)
N | ||
---|---|---|
Job | Nurses | 70 |
Physicians | 19 | |
Othersa | 11 | |
Gender | Male | 21 |
Female | 79 | |
Age (years) | Median (IQR) | 47.0 (36.0–55.0) |
Type of healthcare institution (affiliation) | Clinical Hospital Centre | 55 |
Clinical Hospital | 12 | |
County General Hospital | 27 | |
Special Hospital | 1 | |
Health Centre | 4 | |
Public Health Institute | 1 | |
Close contact at the workplace | Infected patient | 68 |
Infected colleague | 31 | |
Contagious biological material | 1 |
physiotherapists, laboratory technicians, radiology engineers, occupational therapists, physicists; IQR – interquartile range
Table 2 shows which documents participants submitted to the OHP to support the claim of occupational COVID-19. All participants tested SARS-CoV-2 positive with the PCR test and most also submitted a medical report confirming the diagnosis of COVID-19 (N=99), history of other diseases issued by a family physician (N=77), and employer’s statement about occupational exposure to SARS-CoV-2 (N=61). Eighty participants did not submit complete basic documentation. Practically all of the missing basic documents needed to evidence the association between workplace exposure to SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 (job description and employer statement about occupational exposure to SARS-CoV-2). Half (N=41) of the participants with insufficient documentation lacked job description, and 31 did not submit either job description or employer statement. In that respect, participants working in clinical hospitals and clinical hospital centres were more careful to enclose employer’s statement than those working in county general hospitals (OR=3.42; 95 % CI 1.35–8.66, P<0.05), who, in turn, were more careful to submit job description (OR=2.77; 95 % CI 1.07–7.19, P<0.05).
Documents submitted to OHP by participants (N=100) to support claim for occupational COVID-19
N | ||
---|---|---|
Basic documentation | Medical report confirming COVID-19 diagnosis, including positive PCR test to SARS-CoV-2 | 99 |
Employer statement about occupational exposure to SARS-CoV-2 | 61 | |
Job description | 28 | |
Supplementary documentation | Family physician data on other diseases | 77 |
Data on the use of PPE | 49 | |
List of completed work tasks | 32 | |
Attendance report evidencing days away from work* | 18 | |
Workplace risk assessment document | 14 | |
Personal travel statement | 13 | |
List of business trips | 4 |
including isolation, sick leave, other leave days, or business travel
Job description is a structured form (usually designated as 2-IN) (11) that gives general information about the worker, employer, job title, education, and working conditions (including hazards and job requirements). In order for the OHP to diagnose occupational COVID-19, job description should be supplemented with employer’s statement confirming HCW’s occupational exposure to SARS-CoV-2 (2, 9). Unfortunately, our study reveals glitches in communication between OHPs, employers, and diseased HCWs. One way to improve this communication is for OHPs to coordinate it with occupational safety experts at Occupational Safety and Health Committee meetings in order to streamline evidence of the occupational aetiology of a disease (12), as, currently, SARS-CoV-2 infection cannot be diagnosed or recognised as occupational without sufficient evidence of occupational exposure (9).
Addressing the varying criteria for recognising occupational COVID-19 between the EU member states, the Occupational Medicine Section of the UEMS published the
We had 13 participants with asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection who apparently do not meet the national and UEMS Statement criterion for occupational COVID-19. Workers with occupationally acquired asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection are not allowed to go to work because of preventive measures, and national authorities are encouraged to find a way to supplement their personal income during isolation on some other basis than occupational disease (2). In Croatia, only the recognition of occupational COVID-19 entails full salary compensation for isolation (13), and so far the national health insurance body has been compensating asymptomatic HCWs as if they had occupational COVID-19.
Another issue to consider are possible long-term health impairments related to COVID-19 that should also be considered for compensation in persons with recognised occupational COVID-19. According to the Croatian obligatory health insurance regulation (14), these patients are entitled to a 100 % refund for sick leaves but not for longer than 18 months. It is still unclear which long-term health consequences of COVID-19 will be compensated as occupational.
Our study is limited to self-reported information and we had no access to medical and workplace documentation but it clearly confirms earlier reports that close contact with diseased patients or colleagues brings the highest risk of occupational COVID-19 regardless of PPE usage, while contact with potentially contaminated biological samples seems to present a negligible risk. It has also brought to our attention issues with supporting documentation. Although medical and workplace documentation (evidencing higher risk of occupational exposure) are equally important in the diagnosis of occupational COVID-19, workplace documentation (employer’s statement, job description) is often lacking, and there is much room left for procedural improvements. To do that, we need better cooperation between OHPs, occupational safety experts, employers, and diseased workers.