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1.
Revista Espanola de Documentacion Cientifica ; 45(4):1-17, 2022.
Article in Spanish | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2110371

ABSTRACT

La pandemia de COVID-19 ha afectado al funcionamiento de las bibliotecas de todos los ámbitos, incluidas las sanitarias. El objetivo de este estudio es analizar su impacto en las bibliotecas especializadas de Ciencias de la Salud de hospitales públicos en España. Metodología: Estudio descriptivo transversal realizado desde junio a noviembre de 2020, mediante cuestionario de 35 ítems enviado por correo electrónico donde se recogieron datos respecto al funcionamiento de las bibliotecas, personal, servicios y colecciones antes y durante la fase 0 del estado de alarma. Resultados: Se identificaron 137 bibliotecas. Se analizaron 100. Durante la fase 0, un 72% de las bibliotecas permanecieron cerradas, el 76% del personal teletrabajó alternando con modalidad presencial. Los servicios más demandados fueron el de obtención de documentos y la búsqueda bibliográfica. Las colecciones no sufrieron cambios. Destacan las oportunidades colaborativas surgidas entre las bibliotecas. Conclusiones: El sistema bibliotecario hospitalario ha experimentado un proceso de adaptación y de reinvención que conlleva cambios en la relación con los usuarios, la forma de trabajo y de colaboración.Alternate :The COVID-19 Pandemic has ostensibly affected the workability of libraries in all sectors, including health service libraries. The aim of this study is to analize the impact of this situation with a descriptive cross-sectional study carried out in specialized libraries of health sciences within public hospitals in Spain. Methodology: This study was carried out via an email questionnaire from june to november of 2020, comprising 35 items and it gathered data in reference to personnel, services and collections before and during phase 0 of the alarm state. Results: 137 libraries were identified and 100 were analyzed. During the phase 0 of the alarm state 72% remained closed and 76% of the staff combined working in person with working from home. The greatest demand was for research papers/documentation and bibliography searches, no change was experienced with regard to collections. More than half who have participated in collaborative work groups value it as very useful. According to the authors, while this situation has revealed that the librarians have had a great capacity to readapt, they conclude that it has also directly affected libraries with their temporary reconversion or in some cases their total closure.

2.
Enferm Clin ; 31: S89-S93, 2021 Feb.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1086919

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: In January 2020, an outbreak of pneumonia caused by a zoonotic virus (SARS-CoV-2) appeared in China. The main route of transmission is considered to be the inhalation of large respiratory drops, by deposition in the mucosa and hands or contaminated fomites. The objective is to identify the interventions to be performed during hospitalization for the correct and safe handling of clothing and hygiene of patients and health professionals. METHOD: Scoping review carried out without chronological or language delimitation in the PUBMED and Cochrane databases. Tracking standards and recommendations of national and international government entities to answer the research question on the safe handling of clothing and skin hygiene in patients and in health professionals to avoid Covid-19 infection. The data analysis was carried out in 2 stages: in the first, identification and categorization of the studies, and in the second, content analysis as an informative and classifying criterion. RESULTS: 14 documents have been selected, mainly from government entities. The recommendations are structured in 5 sections on the management of clothing and skin hygiene of infected patients and health professionals in the hospital setting. CONCLUSION: The clothing of patients and healthcare personnel are transmitting vehicles of the disease. Its correct treatment helps to improve the control of the same and the correct use of the resources available at the moment. Proper skin hygiene, especially hand cleansing, is one of the basic pillars for infection prevention and control. We highlight the similarity of some of the guidelines collected and provided by the different agencies consulted.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Clothing , Health Personnel , Humans , Hygiene , SARS-CoV-2
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