Potential Work-related Exposure to SARS-CoV-2 by Standard
Occupational Grouping Based on Pre-lockdown Working Conditions in
France
Dublin Core
Title
Potential Work-related Exposure to SARS-CoV-2 by Standard
Occupational Grouping Based on Pre-lockdown Working Conditions in
France
Occupational Grouping Based on Pre-lockdown Working Conditions in
France
Subject
COVID-19
Occupational exposure
Respiratory infectious diseases
Socio-occupational disparities
Working conditions
Occupational exposure
Respiratory infectious diseases
Socio-occupational disparities
Working conditions
Description
This study aims to ascertain occupations potentially at greatest risk of exposure to SARS-CoV-2 based on
pre-lockdown working conditions in France. We combined two French population-based surveys documenting workplace exposures to infectious agents, face-to-face contact with the public, and working
with colleagues just before the pandemic. Then, for each 87-level standard French occupational
grouping, we estimated the number and percentage of the French working population reporting these
occupational exposure factors, by gender, using survey weights. As much as 40% (11 million) of all
workers reported at least two exposure factors. Most of the workers concerned were in the healthcare
sector. However, army/police officers, firefighters, hairdressers, teachers, cultural/sports professionals,
and some manual workers were also exposed. Women were overrepresented in certain occupations with
potentially higher risks of exposure such as home caregivers, childminders, and hairdressers. Our
gender-stratified matrix can be used to assign prelockdown work-related exposures to cohorts implemented during the pandemic
pre-lockdown working conditions in France. We combined two French population-based surveys documenting workplace exposures to infectious agents, face-to-face contact with the public, and working
with colleagues just before the pandemic. Then, for each 87-level standard French occupational
grouping, we estimated the number and percentage of the French working population reporting these
occupational exposure factors, by gender, using survey weights. As much as 40% (11 million) of all
workers reported at least two exposure factors. Most of the workers concerned were in the healthcare
sector. However, army/police officers, firefighters, hairdressers, teachers, cultural/sports professionals,
and some manual workers were also exposed. Women were overrepresented in certain occupations with
potentially higher risks of exposure such as home caregivers, childminders, and hairdressers. Our
gender-stratified matrix can be used to assign prelockdown work-related exposures to cohorts implemented during the pandemic
Creator
Narges Ghoroubi 1,2,*, Emilie Counil 1,3
, Myriam Khlat 1
, Myriam Khlat 1
Source
https://pdf.sciencedirectassets.com/287282/1-s2.0-S2093791123X00055/1-s2.0-S2093791123000707/main.pdf?X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjED0aCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJHMEUCIQD4AXl7NYTO7uof3odtfCere47p3FuZ05gtBM9tLAYKHgIgMvSKKZukHQnsIC7AfN%2BNqI6g4GJ8DuEiLzA3BOfw3NUqsgUIBRAFGgwwNTkwMDM1NDY4NjUiDL1BKcpciC1ADknKXyqPBYkoFv2Z4diZWz%2BxuoU9wdX3%2B3ZaYtKlJQCOcOXq0dHseTSGV8fK8G3l3MrlGfjRpQp1K6%2BjvYRK65W2r7bF8HIogSUupa4F29doRPa1ZicO9nZLd0JPMPvl0STbAH9XihE5XDMwdlvqpF7yXcqg2Jw%2BmiGmNOj%2FpExy4D6hKl35d2NJmOICHZIsflG%2F3wjI%2FpGljxBEUOTqsWylmryUsmArEXedoLhQaHBESZWAUl5vGBdgDE4pAAqaX3EbCYfSEGdcAZvNUPIcaCESDwn1ROoACvBpasoHHvTaHbF3dLgiVwIdsrq%2FlJr7tnurTbYdb1j9y2mf0QZzFfpib57EZyIY%2Fh0EOldZM0LQAYV7GwcIvAjnrgS%2FeXLMi5zF%2FP9jZfrcGt2KjnpMAH59e0%2BmcG1y%2BLcWnuxkTzpozgIaJlmhhGLOo7k1eZnuUil%2BAhyzlKT5nHQrgCpunDmPCaYjueJv1N95T%2Byic3jn725i0UFu80ADhqic65LfwIgOpBrv03G6aBRAHMmO1%2F6YQ2hwegEZqXGuMQNsemRzNrhybKh1tO1OXXeYE5bTsSlQW21Lnn9ymVoO4D9dmd97Pevh%2FkMZvB7wNpmhq4FeAEFyhGMYr5HTVAYtz8%2FoigO65D%2BYAdHOqWGEKemn7Igc63T7nxNF6nQhIwlu03lcuRNN4Vzg7FXZajktBp5vS8tR70MOM6%2FXDPcJU29tkS1lf%2B%2Bu5ow18egpllloZAHv%2BcaRAo5lo2TGAaIDnBLZOGuqLfFuiYNy1Pq3%2FhV5KOBT8NBbPNfP6VTPKQwLWcEJ3scCgm%2BHTl4%2BAPgytyTRiKWtu4NnkaK%2FwJLO8Cd6X7j5MBukYROwB00mouBh7SnjkMgj50swxO75zAY6sQHfPoOn1Rt4bmbYE5a9cEg2KuEFOL21eJz5%2FbjD%2BHR1LrAx4cA4qcUa1QVN%2FHTUKx6SAF17noQLXjle8JHmSr6KLBehE%2FghkW5p5Z0ij69iwjYzTLucXQZJbCVthnBfdLj6wpHDcXFTnf3ECT6USKh5WsdVEk5UsFA7TF8YFMEHeJYoD%2Fr45oVVrGgMNNpRLjrtEdvbxh4W8n9TwIvwPEoUgzyPbd%2BKob842bqsLN0rOXU%3D&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20260225T054715Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAQ3PHCVTYVW7ZJPV3%2F20260225%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=7329427e2d76d26aa329fa106a28fe25c6dfadd824be7098553b2d99ddc5a5f0&hash=52a8e03e46dfe531f5f342b37871819a223250f2dc2c3d40a67c3e66b9fe5a48&host=68042c943591013ac2b2430a89b270f6af2c76d8dfd086a07176afe7c76c2c61&pii=S2093791123000707&tid=spdf-d842e314-c481-4dfa-8403-cfc590e5e864&sid=323f66de8e4980408c0be7b-7fe7e7fe55f2gxrqb&type=client&tsoh=d3d3LnNjaWVuY2VkaXJlY3QuY29t&rh=d3d3LnNjaWVuY2VkaXJlY3QuY29t&ua=0b015e065456045f52&rr=9d34e82b4e775d0f&cc=id
Publisher
1 Mortality, Health and Epidemiology Research Unit, The French Institute for Demographic Studies (Ined), Aubervilliers, France
2Doctoral School of Public Health (EDSP), Paris Saclay University, Villejuif, France
3 Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire sur les Enjeux Sociaux e Sciences Sociales, Politique, Santé, IRIS (UMR 8156 CNRS e EHESS e U997 INSERM),
Aubervilliers, France
2Doctoral School of Public Health (EDSP), Paris Saclay University, Villejuif, France
3 Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire sur les Enjeux Sociaux e Sciences Sociales, Politique, Santé, IRIS (UMR 8156 CNRS e EHESS e U997 INSERM),
Aubervilliers, France
Date
26 October 2023
Contributor
FAJAR BAGUS W
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Citation
Narges Ghoroubi 1,2,*, Emilie Counil 1,3
, Myriam Khlat 1, “Potential Work-related Exposure to SARS-CoV-2 by Standard
Occupational Grouping Based on Pre-lockdown Working Conditions in
France,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 26, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/11648.
Occupational Grouping Based on Pre-lockdown Working Conditions in
France,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 26, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/11648.