key: cord-0952936-auhxihnq authors: An, Yongbo; Bellato, Vittoria; Konishi, Tsuyoshi; Pellino, Gianluca; Sensi, Bruno; Siragusa, Leandro; Franceschilli, Marzia; Sica, Giuseppe S title: Surgeons' fear of getting infected by COVID19: A global survey date: 2020-08-18 journal: Br J Surg DOI: 10.1002/bjs.11833 sha: 0f11171e72d8e43a4e97cfe72c3a73326ee29055 doc_id: 952936 cord_uid: auhxihnq nan , and the surgeon's personal feeling was also investigated in the survey. In this special letter, we performed multivariate analysis to explore factors that associated with surgeon's fear of getting infected by COVID-19. In total, 1124 surgeons from 936 centers in 71 countries replied to the questions. Regarding surgeon's satisfaction towards hospital's preventive measures, 612 of the respondents (54⋅4%) agreed that their centers were taking enough preventive measures to avoid inhospital transmission. With respect to the results by nations, respondents from the UK reported lowest satisfaction (6/27, 22⋅2%), while those from China (70/73, 95⋅9%) and the Netherland (26/33, 78⋅8%) reported higher satisfaction. When asked about the personal fear of getting sick or infecting others (1 point = never, 5 points = always), the respondents in overall reported a relatively high score (the mean ± SD of all respondents: 3⋅7 ± 1⋅3). The respondents from Mexico (4⋅7 ± 0⋅6, n = 31), the US (4⋅2 ± 1⋅2, n = 51) and Turkey (4⋅2 ± 1⋅0, n = 38) had higher scores, while those from the Netherlands (2⋅5 ± 1⋅2, n = 33) and China (2⋅6 ± 1⋅4, n = 73) had lower scores. In order to explore factors that were associated with surgeon's fear of getting infected, univariate and multivariate analysis were performed using the data from the entire survey (including content about COVID-19 testing policies, protective measures and COVID-19 caseload) ( Table 1) . Surgeons with personal fear were defined as those with 4 or 5 points in the question "Have you ever been afraid of getting sick or infecting others because of your work?". The factors with P values < 0⋅1 in the univariate analysis were high risk country (P = 0⋅067), shortage of gloves (P = 0⋅077), shortage of gowns (P = 0⋅096), shortage of surgical masks (P < 0⋅001), satisfaction to hospital's measures (P < 0⋅001), available guideline (P = 0⋅019), episodes with asymptomatic patients in surgical settings (P = 0⋅001), experiencing inhospital infections (P = 0⋅002), and staff infections (P = 0⋅006). The multivariate analysis of these parameters revealed that shortage of surgical masks (OR: 1⋅605, 95%CI: 1⋅120-2⋅299, P = 0⋅01), unsatisfaction towards hospital's preventive measures (OR: 2⋅155, 95%CI: 1⋅650-2⋅813, P < 0⋅001) and experiencing in-hospital infections (OR: 1⋅457, 95%CI: 1⋅052-2⋅018, P = 0⋅024) were independently associated with surgeon's fear of getting infected. It is noteworthy that high caseload (>10 cases) of COVID-19 in the centers (P = 0⋅544 in univariate analysis) and countries' pandemic status of high risk (P = 0⋅729 in multivariate analysis) were not related to surgeon's fear. (High risk countries are defined as the ones with death case number of COVID-19 being more than 5000 on 8 th April.) This survey clarified the current surgeons' fear of getting infected due to their work, and the fear was particularly associated with surgical mask shortage and experiencing in-hospital infections. Since the propagation of the virus is subsiding, many hospitals are currently restarting elective surgeries. With increasing surgeons' workload, the social support for the surgeons' fear and securing working environment with enough PPE supply are warranted. COVID-19 pandemic: perspectives on an unfolding crisis Elective surgery cancellations due to the COVID-19 pandemic: global predictive modelling to inform surgical recovery plans Immediate and long-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on delivery of surgical services Safe management of surgical smoke in the age of COVID-19 Recommendations for general surgery activities in a pandemic scenario (SARS-CoV-2) Impact of Asymptomatic COVID-19 Patients in Global Surgical Practice during the COVID-19 Pandemic We would like to thank all the collaborators of "S-COVID Collaborative Group" 6