A Wellington nurse treating a Covid-19 patient has tested positive for coronavirus. Photo / 123rf
A nurse at Wellington Regional Hospital has tested positive for Covid-19.
Capital and Coast District Health Board chief executive Fionnagh Dougan said the nurse was involved in the care of patients with the coronavirus and this week tested positive for Covid-19.
"They last worked on Monday, April 6, at which time they felt well, and have not worked since experiencing symptoms," Dougan said.
"Regional Public Health is now working with them to trace any community contacts, and colleagues they have been in direct contact with have been offered testing and support.
On Tuesday the Ministry of Health said 107 healthcare workers had been infected with Covid-19.
Of those 56 were infected outside of work including links to travel, and 46 were either infected by a colleague who contracted it outside work, or infected through exposure to a sick patient or rest home resident.
Last week two nurses were confirmed positive with Covid-19 at Waikato Hospital.
They alleged through the New Zealand Nurses Organisation that they were told to take off PPE by senior staff, while dealing with a patient with respiratory symptoms.
It's understood since then a third nurse tested positive with the coronavirus at Waikato Hospital.
"Now we're at the situation where we've got a nurse that's tested positive, I think those anxieties have become real, and we're still hearing concerns about the lack of PPE gear that is being made available to nurses on the floor."
She said the NZNO was looking at legislation to see what obligations employers had to staff at risk of catching the virus.
A survey by the Nurses Society of New Zealand found a high level of concern by nurses for their personal health and safety amid the Covid-19 outbreak.
The survey collected data from a 16-point questionnaire done by 500 registered nurses.
It showed 77.4 per cent reported that they currently have reasonable access to PPE in their workplace, but 19.6 per cent reported they did not.
One third of respondents were dissatisfied with the current Ministry of Health PPE guidelines for their setting, as well as the local PPE policies and practices in their workplace, but overall there was a high level of satisfaction with the response to Covid-19.
Only 3.8 per cent of those surveyed were "not at all" concerned about their personal health and safety.
"The MoH PPE guidelines have a sound basis but we have always suggested to our membership that they be used as the minimum and that professional judgment should be exercised on a case-by-case or situational basis by nurses, nurse managers and other clinicians and, in some situations, this should mean employing additional or higher-level risk mitigation measures more widely," society director David Wills said.
The Nurses Society of New Zealand represents about 10 per cent of nurses nationwide.