Background: Of many descriptive papers about healthcare workers’ (HW) COVID-19 infection, asymptomatic cases have not yet considered. Aims: The present study calculated the numbers of COVID-19 patients afferent to GI endoscopy and the number of positive HW using nasopharyngeal swabs (NS), serological rapid IgM/IgG tests (SRT) and serological quantitative IgG test (SQT).Methods: The study was conducted from 2ndto 30thApril 2020. All the recommended national and international indications on infection control measures were followed. Out of 1227 patients accepted, 1009 were included in the study. 38 HW were tested by NS, SRT and SQT. Descriptive statistical analyses were used to summarize the data.Results: 17 patients were diagnosed COVID-19 positive at NS. 9 patients were known positive at the time of the endoscopy and 8 were diagnosed COVID-19 positive after the procedure. Of the 38 HW, 2 were positive both to NS and SRT with IgM/IgG lines; 7 showed IgG line only at SRT, confirmed by SQT with negative NS. Other 7 HW showed not well-defined line of IgG at SRT, confirmed negative by SQT. The two cases positive to NS and IgM/IgG SRT were asymptomatic. The crude contagion’s rate (R0)was 0.41 and 1.7% of COVID-19 patients caused 19% of positive cases in HW.Conclusions: Not previously diagnosed COVID-19 patients expose HW to additional and incalculable risk of contamination. Association between different tests reduced the variability related to possible confounding factors and increases the accuracy. Since most cases in HW seem to go asymptomatic, large-scale tests using both NS and SRT for both HW and patients should be recommended to minimize the risk of in-hospital infection’s relapses.