| Literature DB >> 20096128 |
Joanne E McKenzie1, Patricia Priest, Rick Audas, Marion R Poore, Cheryl R Brunton, Lesley M Reeves.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: New Zealand has relatively high rates of morbidity and mortality from infectious disease compared with other OECD countries, with infectious disease being more prevalent in children compared with others in the population. Consequences of infectious disease in children may have significant economic and social impact beyond the direct effects of the disease on the health of the child; including absence from school, transmission of infectious disease to other pupils, staff, and family members, and time off work for parents/guardians. Reduction of the transmission of infectious disease between children at schools could be an effective way of reducing the community incidence of infectious disease. Alcohol based no-rinse hand sanitisers provide an alternative hand cleaning technology, for which there is some evidence that they may be effective in achieving this. However, very few studies have investigated the effectiveness of hand sanitisers, and importantly, the potential wider economic implications of this intervention have not been established. AIMS: The primary objective of this trial is to establish if the provision of hand sanitisers in primary schools in the South Island of New Zealand, in addition to an education session on hand hygiene, reduces the incidence rate of absence episodes due to illness in children. In addition, the trial will establish the cost-effectiveness and conduct a cost-benefit analysis of the intervention in this setting. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20096128 PMCID: PMC2823737 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-11-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Flow diagram of the progress of schools and children through the trial. 1 Includes all children in school years 1 to 6 (generally aged from five to eleven). 2 'Follow-up children' are a randomly selected sample of "All children", whose parents are followed up for detailed information about their illness absences. The primary outcome, absence episodes due to illness, is only measured on this group of children. Figure adapted from Campbell [30].
Outcome measures
| Outcome | Collected by | Timing of collection | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of absence episodes due to any illness1,2 | Telephone interview | 8 - 9 days after the date of the first day of absence from school | Parents of children |
| Number of absence episodes due to respiratory illness | Telephone interview | 8 - 9 days after the date of the first day of absence from school | Parents of children |
| Number of absence episodes due to gastrointestinal illness | Telephone interview | 8 - 9 days after the date of the first day of absence from school | Parents of children |
| Length of illness episode | Telephone interview | 8 - 9 days after the date of the first day of absence from school | Parents of children |
| Length of absence episode | Telephone interview | 8 - 9 days after the date of the first day of absence from school | Parents of children |
| Number of household members who become ill within one week of the participating child's illness onset | Telephone interview | 8 - 9 days after the date of the first day of absence from school | Parents of children |
| Number of absence episodes for any reason | Liaison research assistant3 | Weekly | School roll |
| Length of absence episode | Liaison research assistant3 | Weekly | School roll |
| Skin reactions1 | Telephone interview | Following the intervention period | Parents of children |
1 'Follow-up children' only.
2 Parents will not be telephoned where it is clear that the child was not unwell (for example, on a holiday, attended a funeral, etc).
3 Through contact with school staff or by extracting the data in person.