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

Association of working shifts, inside and outside of healthcare, with severe COVID−19: an observational study
Association of working shifts, inside and outside of healthcare, with severe COVID−19: an observational study
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 COVID-19 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.
1471-2458
Rowlands, A.V.
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Gillies, C.
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Chudasama, Y.
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Davies, M.J.
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Islam, N.
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Kloecker, D.E.
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Lawson, C.
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Pareek, M.
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Razieh, C.
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Zaccardi, F.
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Yates, T.
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Khunti, K.
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Rowlands, A.V.
881cca19-ef16-40b6-880e-4de367a2ade8
Gillies, C.
fc26555a-79f4-4d0e-9a34-1dc4fbda4be9
Chudasama, Y.
db7bd499-1299-43fe-9e6a-8db8b44eab8c
Davies, M.J.
46ee5832-3373-48f6-aa44-68122ad687f2
Islam, N.
e5345196-7479-438f-b4f6-c372d2135586
Kloecker, D.E.
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Lawson, C.
c690cd38-08ca-4add-aae5-2f2fabedc793
Pareek, M.
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Razieh, C.
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Zaccardi, F.
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Yates, T.
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Khunti, K.
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Rowlands, A.V., Gillies, C., Chudasama, Y., Davies, M.J., Islam, N., Kloecker, D.E., Lawson, C., Pareek, M., Razieh, C., Zaccardi, F., Yates, T. and Khunti, K. (2021) Association of working shifts, inside and outside of healthcare, with severe COVID−19: an observational study. BMC Public Health, 21, [773]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-021-10839-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

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 COVID-19 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.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2021
Published date: 22 April 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508758
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508758
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: e5d25a0e-b96d-407e-b990-45cdff0933ee
ORCID for N. Islam: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3982-4325

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Date deposited: 03 Feb 2026 17:33
Last modified: 07 Feb 2026 03:19

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Contributors

Author: A.V. Rowlands
Author: C. Gillies
Author: Y. Chudasama
Author: M.J. Davies
Author: N. Islam ORCID iD
Author: D.E. Kloecker
Author: C. Lawson
Author: M. Pareek
Author: C. Razieh
Author: F. Zaccardi
Author: T. Yates
Author: K. Khunti

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