Health Care Worker Exposures to Pertussis: Missed Opportunities for Prevention

Author:

Kuncio Danica E.12,Middleton Maria2,Cooney Mary G.2,Ramos Mark2,Coffin Susan E.234,Feemster Kristen A.23456

Affiliation:

1. Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut; and

2. The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia,

3. University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine,

4. Center for Pediatric Clinical Effectiveness, and

5. PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

6. Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics,

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Pediatric health care workers (HCWs) are at particular risk for pertussis exposure, infection, and subsequent disease transmission to susceptible patients. This cross-sectional study describes the epidemiology of occupational exposures to pertussis and identifies factors that may inform interventions to promote effective implementation of infection prevention and control (IPC) guidelines. METHODS: We abstracted data from occupational health (OH) and IPC records for pertussis cases that resulted in an exposure investigation in a large quaternary pediatric care network, January 1, 2002 to July 18, 2011. We calculated the frequency of occupational exposures and measured associated characteristics. To assess the frequency of potential missed exposures, we reviewed electronic health record (EHR) data identifying laboratory-confirmed pertussis cases not documented in OH or IPC records. RESULTS: A total of 1193 confirmed HCW pertussis exposures were associated with 219 index cases during the study period. Of these, 38.8% were infants <6 months old and 7 were HCWs. Most (77.5%) of exposures occurred in the emergency department or an ambulatory site; 27.0% of exposures occurred after documented initiation of IPC precautions. We identified 450 laboratory-confirmed pertussis cases through EHR review, of which 49.8% (N = 224) had no OH or IPC investigation. The majority of uninvestigated cases (77.2%) were from ambulatory sites. CONCLUSIONS: Occupational exposures to pertussis occur frequently in pediatric health care settings despite appropriate IPC guidelines. Interventions are needed to ensure consistent implementation of IPC practices and timely identification and reporting of pertussis index cases to prevent HCW exposures and potential transmission to patients.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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