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Hanna B. Demeke Leah Zilversmit Pao Hollie Clark Lisa Romero Antonio Neri Rhea Shah Kendra B. McDow Erica Tindall Naureen J. Iqbal Kendra Hatfield-Timajchy Joshua Bolton Xuan Le Brionna Hair Stephanie Campbell Cuong Bui Paramjit Sandhu Isaac Nwaise Paige A. Armstrong Michelle A. Rose 《MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report》2020,69(50):1902
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Sonja J. Olsen Amber K. Winn Alicia P. Budd Mila M. Prill John Steel Claire M. Midgley Krista Kniss Erin Burns Thomas Rowe Angela Foust Gabriela Jasso Angiezel Merced-Morales C. Todd Davis Yunho Jang Joyce Jones Peter Daly Larisa Gubareva John Barnes Rebecca Kondor Wendy Sessions Catherine Smith David E. Wentworth Shikha Garg Fiona P. Havers Alicia M. Fry Aron J. Hall Lynnette Brammer Benjamin J. Silk 《MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report》2021,70(29):1013
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Suparna Bagchi Josephine Mak Qunna Li Edward Sheriff Elisabeth Mungai Angela Anttila Minn Minn Soe Jonathan R. Edwards Andrea L. Benin Daniel A. Pollock Evan Shulman Shari Ling Jean Moody-Williams Lee A. Fleisher Arjun Srinivasan Jeneita M. Bell 《MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report》2021,70(2):52
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Livvy Shafer Faruque Ahmed Sara Kim Karen J. Wernli Michael L. Jackson Mary Patricia Nowalk Todd Bear Richard K. Zimmerman Emily T. Martin Arnold S. Monto Manjusha Gaglani Michael Reis Jessie R. Chung Brendan Flannery Amra Uzicanin 《Emerging infectious diseases》2023,29(2):278
Persons with COVID-19–like illnesses are advised to stay home to reduce the spread of SARS-CoV-2. We assessed relationships between telework experience and COVID-19 illness with work attendance when ill. Adults experiencing fever, cough, or loss of taste or smell who sought healthcare or COVID-19 testing in the United States during March–November 2020 were enrolled. Adults with telework experience before illness were more likely to work at all (onsite or remotely) during illness (87.8%) than those with no telework experience (49.9%) (adjusted odds ratio 5.48, 95% CI 3.40–8.83). COVID-19 case-patients were less likely to work onsite (22.1%) than were persons with other acute respiratory illnesses (37.3%) (adjusted odds ratio 0.36, 95% CI 0.24–0.53). Among COVID-19 case-patients with telework experience, only 6.5% worked onsite during illness. Telework experience before illness gave mildly ill workers the option to work and improved compliance with public health recommendations to stay home during illness. 相似文献
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