Experience of infection preventionists during the first wave of COVID-19 outside of China Meeting Abstract


Authors: Bubb, T. N.; Haas, J. P.
Abstract Title: Experience of infection preventionists during the first wave of COVID-19 outside of China
Meeting Title: Annual Meeting of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control (APIC 2021)
Abstract: Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) progressed to a full-fledged outbreak, primarily in New York City in March 2020. The goal of this project was to document the impact and experiences of COVID-19 on Infection Preventionists (IPs) in real time. A weekly link to a Google survey for IPs about the COVID-19 experience was posted on social media started on March 8, 2020. Contacts of the authors and survey participants were emailed links to all subsequent surveys. Based on participant feedback, the survey was semi-monthly from May 15 - -July 15. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze quantitative data, thematic analysis was used for qualitative data. Participation was voluntary and no Institutional Review Board review was sought. Fifty-two individuals completed 154 surveys over 14 survey rounds. Forty-two percent completed 1 survey, and 4% completed 11. Sixteen US states and 4 countries were represented. Most participants worked in Acute care. Respondents worked significant overtime in March (mean 68 hours/week) and April (mean 51 hours/week) and observed decreases in COVID-19 patient census in the first half of May. Themes that emerged from qualitative analysis were basic IP practices and personal protective equipment shortages. Overall, IPs reported high stress early in study, with emotional exhaustion peaking at the end of the study. IPs reported more empowerment, credibility, and value to their facilities during the pandemic. IPs are specialized healthcare workers at the heart of managing this pandemic. IPs predictably worked long hours, were concerned about PPE and basics of infection prevention that are critical to keeping staff safe. They also reported that the impact of COVID-19 on the IP role was largely positive.
Keywords: congresses and conferences; attitude of health personnel -- evaluation; covid-19 pandemic; infection preventionists; work experiences -- evaluation
Journal Title: American Journal of Infection Control
Volume: 49
Issue: 6 Suppl.
Meeting Dates: 2021 Jun 28-30
Meeting Location: Virtual
ISSN: 0196-6553
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2021-06-01
Start Page: S8
End Page: S9
Language: English
ACCESSION: 151122827
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajic.2021.04.034
PROVIDER: EBSCOhost
PROVIDER: cinahl
DOI/URL:
Notes: Meeting Abstract: LPD 20 -- Accession Number: 151122827 -- Entry Date: 20210705 -- Revision Date: 20210707 -- Publication Type: Article; abstract; proceedings; research -- Supplement Title: 2021 Supplement -- Journal Subset: Core Nursing; Nursing; Peer Reviewed; USA -- NLM UID: 8004854. -- Source: Cinahl
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  1. Tania N. Bubb
    15 Bubb