Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia

Background: Avian influenza has been documented in over 331 humans since 2003 with 203 associated deaths. Health Care Workers (HCWs) have been shown to be at personal risk during other highly virulent outbreaks with a high attack rate. This study aimed to determine the magnitude and factors associat...

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Main Author: Maia Butsashvili,1 Wayne Triner,2 George Kamkamidze,1 Maia Kajaia,1 Louise-Anne McNutt.2
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Journal of Infection in Developing Countries 2007-12-01
Series:Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.oloep.org/jidc/content.asp?id=1143
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spelling doaj-82c4339c98504003bc8451f8ed27b4552020-11-25T02:52:06ZengThe Journal of Infection in Developing CountriesJournal of Infection in Developing Countries1972-26802007-12-0113329332Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in GeorgiaMaia Butsashvili,1 Wayne Triner,2 George Kamkamidze,1 Maia Kajaia,1 Louise-Anne McNutt.2Background: Avian influenza has been documented in over 331 humans since 2003 with 203 associated deaths. Health Care Workers (HCWs) have been shown to be at personal risk during other highly virulent outbreaks with a high attack rate. This study aimed to determine the magnitude and factors associated with absenteeism of hospital based health care workers (HCWs) in Georgia associated with a potential highly virulent influenza pandemic.Methodology: This was a cross-sectional study of how HCWs responded to a potentially highly virulent influenza pandemic in two urban hospitals in Georgia. Hospital based physicians and nurses were studied. Data was collected utilizing a survey instrument. The survey was either self-administered or interviewer administered based upon the preference of the respondent.Results: There were 288 HCWs surveyed. The study suggested a 23% rate of worker absenteeism, predominately among women and nurses. The majority of the respondents (58.1%), mostly HCWs less than age 35, were opposed to forced isolation or quarantine of staff during a highly virulent influenza pandemic. Seventy-six percent of respondents correctly reported that the strain of virus that was responsible for the outbreaks in the neighboring countries was H5N1. Only 15.5% of respondents, however, correctly identified influenza as the culprit virus.Conclusions: The rate of work absenteeism suggested by this study represents a significant workforce reduction. There are specific groups who would choose not to attend work in the face of a flu pandemic. This information may allow planners to target these specific groups for education and social support services to encourage greater inclination to attend to clinical duties.http://www.oloep.org/jidc/content.asp?id=1143pandemic influenzaknowledgeepidemiologypublic healthhealth care workers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maia Butsashvili,1 Wayne Triner,2 George Kamkamidze,1 Maia Kajaia,1 Louise-Anne McNutt.2
spellingShingle Maia Butsashvili,1 Wayne Triner,2 George Kamkamidze,1 Maia Kajaia,1 Louise-Anne McNutt.2
Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
pandemic influenza
knowledge
epidemiology
public health
health care workers
author_facet Maia Butsashvili,1 Wayne Triner,2 George Kamkamidze,1 Maia Kajaia,1 Louise-Anne McNutt.2
author_sort Maia Butsashvili,1 Wayne Triner,2 George Kamkamidze,1 Maia Kajaia,1 Louise-Anne McNutt.2
title Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia
title_short Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia
title_full Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia
title_fullStr Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in Georgia
title_sort knowledge and anticipated behavior of health care workers in response to an outbreak of pandemic influenza in georgia
publisher The Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
series Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
issn 1972-2680
publishDate 2007-12-01
description Background: Avian influenza has been documented in over 331 humans since 2003 with 203 associated deaths. Health Care Workers (HCWs) have been shown to be at personal risk during other highly virulent outbreaks with a high attack rate. This study aimed to determine the magnitude and factors associated with absenteeism of hospital based health care workers (HCWs) in Georgia associated with a potential highly virulent influenza pandemic.Methodology: This was a cross-sectional study of how HCWs responded to a potentially highly virulent influenza pandemic in two urban hospitals in Georgia. Hospital based physicians and nurses were studied. Data was collected utilizing a survey instrument. The survey was either self-administered or interviewer administered based upon the preference of the respondent.Results: There were 288 HCWs surveyed. The study suggested a 23% rate of worker absenteeism, predominately among women and nurses. The majority of the respondents (58.1%), mostly HCWs less than age 35, were opposed to forced isolation or quarantine of staff during a highly virulent influenza pandemic. Seventy-six percent of respondents correctly reported that the strain of virus that was responsible for the outbreaks in the neighboring countries was H5N1. Only 15.5% of respondents, however, correctly identified influenza as the culprit virus.Conclusions: The rate of work absenteeism suggested by this study represents a significant workforce reduction. There are specific groups who would choose not to attend work in the face of a flu pandemic. This information may allow planners to target these specific groups for education and social support services to encourage greater inclination to attend to clinical duties.
topic pandemic influenza
knowledge
epidemiology
public health
health care workers
url http://www.oloep.org/jidc/content.asp?id=1143
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