| Literature DB >> 17697389 |
Julia E Aledort1, Nicole Lurie, Jeffrey Wasserman, Samuel A Bozzette.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In an influenza pandemic, the benefit of vaccines and antiviral medications will be constrained by limitations on supplies and effectiveness. Non-pharmaceutical public health interventions will therefore be vital in curtailing disease spread. However, the most comprehensive assessments of the literature to date recognize the generally poor quality of evidence on which to base non-pharmaceutical pandemic planning decisions. In light of the need to prepare for a possible pandemic despite concerns about the poor quality of the literature, combining available evidence with expert opinion about the relative merits of non-pharmaceutical interventions for pandemic influenza may lead to a more informed and widely accepted set of recommendations. We evaluated the evidence base for non-pharmaceutical public health interventions. Then, based on the collective evidence, we identified a set of recommendations for and against interventions that are specific to both the setting in which an intervention may be used and the pandemic phase, and which can be used by policymakers to prepare for a pandemic until scientific evidence can definitively respond to planners' needs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17697389 PMCID: PMC2040158 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-7-208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Results of literature search
| Titles identified | 2,556 |
| Remaining after exclusion of case reports and articles pertaining to vaccines, antiviral medications other medical countermeasures | 506 |
| Remaining after title and abstract review | 319 |
| Remaining after screen for relevance | 168 |
Modified rating scheme and results for N = 168 articles
| Systematic Review | Documented extensive literature search; quantitative or qualitative summary | A | 9 |
| Narrative Review | Summary of field or problem by an expert citing references obtained in a non-systematic manner | B | 49 |
| RCT | Prospectively randomized at individual or group level | C | 3 |
| Observational Studies | Formal design, almost always a control group whether prospective or retrospective, and whether cross-section, panel, or case-control. Includes analysis of large dataset analysis. | D | 29 |
| Mathematical Models | Uses mathematical language to describe and predict biomedical and epidemiologic outcomes. | E | 12 |
| Case Reports or Series | Report of a (hopefully pertinent) case or series of cases, often with a perspective on the current state of affairs or the current literature | F | 30 |
| Diagnostic Test Studies | Studies of the laboratory or filed performance of a diagnostic test. Generally compare sensitivity and specificity to some gold standard | G | 0 |
| Evidence Based guidelines | Guidelines developed by bodies after review of the literature | H | 9 |
| Expert Opinion, Editorials & Commentaries | Opinion or "newsy" narratives | I | 27 |
Non-pharmaceutical public health interventions
| Case reporting |
| Early rapid viral diagnosis |
| Disinfection |
| Hand hygiene |
| Respiratory etiquette |
| Surgical and N95 Masks |
| Other personal protective equipment* |
| Isolation of sick individuals |
| Provision of social support services to the isolated |
| Quarantine† |
| Voluntary sheltering‡ |
| Contact tracing |
| School closures |
| Workplace closures |
| Cancellation of group events |
| International and domestic travel restrictions |
* Gowns, gloves and protective eye covers
† Separating exposed individuals from others
‡ Voluntary sequestration of healthy persons to avoid exposure
§Exit and entry screening, travel advisories
Figure 1Survey questionnaire results. *Hospital = inpatient acute care hospital, inpatient long-term care facility or any inpatient setting; 'Ambulatory' = emergency departments, ambulatory hospital care, urgent care centers, providers' offices, clinics or other community-based healthcare settings and includes care delivered in the community by first responders; 'Community' = schools workplaces, churches, malls, stadiums, etc,; 'Home' = care delivered in private residences. †None = overseas cases only; Elsewhere = no cases in your state/locality/jurisdiction; Early Localized = cases your state/locality/jurisdiction; Advanced = widespread human-to-human transmission in the US §Since some items were left blank, the indicated results were based on 9, 10, 11 or 12 responses (of out of a possible 13). All remaining results are based on all 13 responses. Green Circle (insert '=') Recommendation for use (46/200 items (23%))Red Circle (insert '=') Recommendation against use (37/200 items (18.5%))(insert space) Clear Circle (insert '=') Disagreement (117/200 items (59%) (insert space) Dash (insert '=') Not Applicable (respondents were instructed to leave blank)