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1.
Safety and Health at Work ; : 490-495, 2021.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-918773

ABSTRACT

Materials and methods@#A cross-sectional study aimed to assess the prevalence of fear of COVID-19 among 411 frontline Egyptian physicians during the COVID-19 pandemic; identify determinants and predictors for fear of COVID-19; determine the impact of fear of COVID-19 on job satisfaction; and detect the impact of fear of COVID-19 on turnover intention. Three standardized scales (fear of COVID-19, job satisfaction, and turnover intention scores) were used for data collection via online Google Form. @*Results@#Regarding fear relating to the COVID-19 pandemic, 16.5% of the study subjects were classified as experiencing a severe fear level, while 78.1% experienced a moderate degree. A significant association between the level of fear relating to COVID-19 and the work department. The highest degree of fear is in a general-educational-university facility. Regarding job satisfaction, 42% of those having a severe level of fear are dissatisfied. Fear of COVID-19 is negatively associated with job satisfaction while positively significant correlated with turnover scores, a positive significant predictor of turnover intention. Job satisfaction is negatively associated with turnover intention; a negative significant predictor of turnover intention. @*Conclusions@#Frontline Egyptian physicians reported higher levels of fear relating to the COVID-19 pandemic (moderate to severe). Increased fear levels relating to COVID-19 have a relationship with lower levels of job satisfaction and higher levels of job turnover.

2.
Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health. 2013; 3 (3): 123-129
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-127512

ABSTRACT

To study different risk factors associated with needle stick injury among health care workers of a tertiary care hospital in Saudi Arabia. Retrospective study involving all reported cases of needle stick and sharp object injury among health care workers through using Epinet [TM] access U.K. version 1.3 program in King Saud Medical City [KSMC] during the period [January 2007-December 2011]. During the study period, 477 needle stick and sharp object injuries were reported with peak incidence [13.84%] during 2009. Distribution of needle stick and sharp object injuries according to the location of their occurrence clarified that patient room/ward was the most common place of occurrence of NSSIs 150/477, followed by emergency department 82/477, then the intensive and critical care units 70/477. The study presented that nurses were encountered as the most affected job category and use of items is the most common activity associated with the incidents. Most of the incidents were caused by needles with disposable needle and hands were the most affected body parts. Needle stick and sharp object injuries represent a major occupational challenge to health care workers. Prevention should be based on different working lines including immunization, education of health care workers and proper engineering control measures


Subject(s)
Humans , Health Personnel , Tertiary Healthcare , Risk Factors , Retrospective Studies , Occupational Health
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