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Association of working shifts, inside and outside of healthcare, with severe COVID-19: an observational study.

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posted on 2022-08-26, 14:23 authored by A.V. Rowlands, C. Gillies, Y. Chudasama, M.J. Davies, N. Islam, D.E. Kloecker, C. Lawson, M. Pareek, C. Razieh, F. Zaccardi, T. Yates, K. Khunti

Background: Health and key workers have elevated odds of developing severe COVID-19; it is not known, however, if this is exacerbated in those with irregular work patterns. We aimed to investigate the odds of developing severe COVID-19 in health and shift workers. Methods: We included UK Biobank participants in employment or self-employed at baseline (2006–2010) and with linked COVID-19 data to 31st August 2020. Participants were grouped as neither a health worker nor shift worker (reference category) at baseline, health worker only, shift worker only, or both, and associations with severe COVID19 investigated in logistic regressions. Results: Of 235,685 participants (81·5% neither health nor shift worker, 1·4% health worker only, 16·9% shift worker only, and 0·3% both), there were 580 (0·25%) cases of severe COVID-19. The odds of severe COVID-19 was higher in health workers (adjusted odds ratio: 2·32 [95% CI: 1·33, 4·05]; shift workers (2·06 [1·72, 2·47]); and in health workers who worked shifts (7·56 [3·86, 14·79]). Being both a health worker and a shift worker had a possible greater impact on the odds of severe COVID-19 in South Asian and Black and African Caribbean ethnicities compared to White individuals. Conclusions: Both health and shift work (measured at baseline, 2006–2010) were independently associated with over twice the odds of severe COVID-19 in 2020; the odds were over seven times higher in health workers who work shifts. Vaccinations, therapeutic and preventative options should take into consideration not only health and key worker status but also shift worker status. 

Funding

This research was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, the NIHR Applied Research Collaborations – East Midlands, and a grant from the UKRI-DHSC COVID-19 Rapid Response Rolling Call (MR/V020536/1). MP is supported by a NIHR Development and Skills Enhancement Award and UKRI/MRC/NIHR (MR/ V027549/1).

History

Citation

BMC Public Health volume 21, 773 (2021)

Author affiliation

Department of Respiratory Science

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMC public health

Volume

21

Publisher

BMC

issn

1471-2458

eissn

1471-2458

Acceptance date

2021-04-01

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-08-26

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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