| Literature DB >> 24373292 |
Kaitlin Rainwater-Lovett1, Kevin Chun, Justin Lessler.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evaluation of influenza control measures frequently focuses on the efficacy of chemoprophylaxis and vaccination, while the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPI) receives less emphasis. While influenza control measures are frequently reported for individual outbreaks, there have been few efforts to characterize the real-world effectiveness of these interventions across outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: Attack rate; influenza; intervention; long-term care facility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24373292 PMCID: PMC3877675 DOI: 10.1111/irv.12203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Influenza Other Respir Viruses ISSN: 1750-2640 Impact factor: 4.380
Figure 1Article selection process. n = number of articles.
Chemoprophylaxis and non-pharmaceutical interventions for influenza outbreak control in long-term care facilities by article
| Author (year) | Number of outbreaks included in review | Numbers of cases/individuals at-risk | Chemo prophylaxis | Personal protective equipment | Social distancing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arden | 1 | 14/55 | A | – | – |
| Arroyo | 1 | 89/176 | – | H, M | N, V |
| Bowles | 4 | 95/413 | A, O | – | – |
| Burette | 1 | 32/62 | – | – | – |
| Bush | 1 | 26/91 | O | D | I, N, T, V |
| Chang | 1 | 23/55 | O | – | – |
| Coles | 1 | 55/270 | – | – | – |
| Degelau | 1 | 22/140 | A | – | – |
| Dindinaud | 1 | 65/116 | – | – | – |
| Drinka | 5 | 223/3560 | A, R | – | – |
| Drinka | 4 | 152/718 | R, Z | – | – |
| Drinka and Haupt (2007) | 1 | 15/50 | O, R | D | I |
| Ferson | 1 | 35/69 | – | – | I, N, V |
| Gaillat | 1 | 38/129 | O | M | I |
| Goodman | 1 | 30/120 | – | – | I, V |
| Hall | 1 | 129/359 | – | H | I |
| Horman | 1 | 76/170 | – | – | – |
| Infuso | 1 | 43/66 | – | – | – |
| Lee | 1 | 69/176 | A, Z | D | N, V |
| Libow | 1 | 139/499 | A | – | I |
| Mast | 2 | 139/1162 | A | – | N, V |
| Mathur | 1 | 25/354 | – | H, M | I, V |
| Meiklejohn | 1 | 40/98 | – | – | – |
| MMWR (1993) | 1 | 99/224 | – | – | – |
| Morens and Rash (1995) | 1 | 11/39 | A | D | I, V |
| Murayama | 2 | 66/256 | – | – | – |
| Oguma | 2 | 24/312 | – | H, M | I |
| Parker | 1 | 28/286 | O | – | I |
| Peters | 1 | 15/140 | A | – | – |
| Read | 3 | 85/211 | – | – | N, V |
| Schilling | 1 | 68/721 | A | H, M | I, V |
| Schilling | 9 | 66/250 | R, Z | – | – |
| Seale | 1 | 22/89 | O | – | I |
| Staynor | 1 | 22/88 | A | – | I, N, V |
| Strassburg | 1 | 46/87 | – | – | – |
| Taylor | 1 | 59/137 | – | – | – |
| Win | 1 | 19/180 | – | – | – |
A, amantadine; O, oseltamivir; R, rimantadine; Z, zanamivir. D, droplet precautions; H, hand hygiene; I, isolation or cohorting; M, masks; N, no new admissions; T, ward transfer restrictions; V, visitor restriction.
Chemoprophylaxis was not used in one outbreak reported in this article.
Figure 2(A) Percentage of vaccinated long-term care facility residents (open circles) and staff (dark circles) over time in 47 and 21 influenza outbreaks reporting vaccination rates, respectively. (B) Percentage of vaccinated residents (open circles) and staff (dark circles) and influenza-like illness attack rates.
Figure 3Unadjusted mean attack rates (95% CI) from influenza outbreaks in long-term care facilities by intervention method. Outbreaks do not sum to 60 as 19 outbreaks used ≥2 antiviral drugs for prophylaxis. Non-pharmaceutical interventions were used in conjunction with amantadine (n = 4 outbreaks), oseltamivir (n = 6 outbreaks) and zanamivir (n = 2 outbreaks). CI = confidence interval; n = number of outbreaks.
Odds ratios (95% CI) of the effect of influenza interventions on attack rates among outbreaks consisting of influenza A only (Models 1 and 2) and outbreaks of influenza A or B (Models 3 and 4) in long-term care facilities, considering antiviral interventions together (Models 1 and 3) and as independent interventions (Models 2 and 4)
| Influenza A outbreaks ( | Influenza A or B outbreaks ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |
| No intervention | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Personal protective equipment | 0·75 (0·33, 1·61) | 0·53 (0·25, 1·10) | 0·99 (0·49, 1·93) | 0·63 (0·33, 1·19) |
| Social distancing | 1·05 (0·53, 2·16) | 1·35 (0·72, 2·62) | 1·07 (0·58, 1·90) | 1·31 (0·78, 2·18) |
| Any antiviral drug | – | – | ||
| Adamantanes | – | – | ||
| Neuraminidase inhibitors | – | 1·55 (0·62, 3·98) | – | 1·27 (0·56, 2·76) |
| Adamantanes and Neuraminidase inhibitors | – | 0·64 (0·35, 1·28) | – | 0·57 (0·31, 1·03) |
| Influenza B | – | – | 0·55 (0·27, 1·15) | |
CI, confidence interval; n, number of outbreaks.
Point estimates and 95% CIs were derived from hierarchical binomial models and are interpreted as the difference in the odds of becoming an influenza case in a facility with a particular policy versus a facility where no intervention was implemented.
Bolded estimates indicate statistically significant effects (P < 0·05).
Reference indicates that outbreaks using ‘No intervention’ served as the comparison group for calculating odds ratios.