| Literature DB >> 29587707 |
Lori Uscher-Pines1, Heather L Schwartz2, Faruque Ahmed3, Yenlik Zheteyeva3, Erika Meza2, Garrett Baker2, Amra Uzicanin3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During an evolving influenza pandemic, community mitigation strategies, such as social distancing, can slow down virus transmission in schools and surrounding communities. To date, research on school practices to promote social distancing in primary and secondary schools has focused on prolonged school closure, with little attention paid to the identification and feasibility of other more sustainable interventions. To develop a list and typology of school practices that have been proposed and/or implemented in an influenza pandemic and to uncover any barriers identified, lessons learned from their use, and documented impacts.Entities:
Keywords: Pandemic influenza; School planning; Social distancing
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587707 PMCID: PMC5870081 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5302-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Literature Search Strategy, 2000–2016
| Database | Search Terms | Results |
|---|---|---|
| EBSCO (Academic Search Premiere) | School (abstract) AND (pandemic or influenza) (abstract) | 998 |
| Education abstracts | (school) and (pandemic or influenza) | 214 |
| Eric | (school) and (pandemic or influenza) | 143 |
| Google Scholar | (school and (influenza or pandemic)) | 200a |
| JSTOR | ((ab:(school) AND ab:(influenza or pandemic)) AND ((social distancing or practices or interventions or strategies or measures))) | 66 |
| Psych INFO | (schools and pandemic or influenza and (social distancing or practices or measures or interventions or strategies) | 106 |
| PubMed | (schools[Title/Abstract]) AND ((social distancing)[Title/Abstract] OR influenza[Title/Abstract] OR pandemic[Title/Abstract]) | 480 |
| Scopus | School and (influenza or pandemic) (AB) | 610 |
| Social Sciences Abstracts | school and (pandemic or influenza) (Title/Abstract) | 104 |
| Sociological Abstracts | school and (pandemic or influenza) (Title/Abstract) | 40 |
| Web of Science | TITLE: (school) | 215 |
| WorldCat | school and (influenza or pandemic) and (strategies or measures or interventions or practices or social distancing) | 891 |
Notes: aOnly first 200 results reviewed
Articles Included in Literature Review, 2000–2016
| Article | Article Type | Location | School Practice(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agent-Based Simulation Model | |||
| Ridenhour [ | Peer-reviewed | N/A | Hall restriction: Defined walking area between classrooms, lunchroom, and schoolyard (e.g., right-hand side of any hall); classroom restriction: Must remain seated while in class; schoolyard restriction: Must stay in a randomly specified schoolyard area (may or may not be classroom-specific); lunchroom restriction: Must only eat with classmates; different schedules/each classroom follows one of three schedules (current schedule, a shift of 45 min, a shift of 90 min) |
| Adalja [ | Peer-reviewed | N/A | Segregating small clusters of children to different parts of the rooma; lunch in classrooms/no congregating for luncha; cancel gym classa |
| Fumanelli [ | Peer-reviewed | N/A | Class or grade closure (in contrast to full school closure)a |
| Gemmetto [ | Peer-reviewed | N/A | Class closure; grade closure |
| Lofgren [ | Peer-reviewed | N/A | Closure of playground/common areas |
| Cooley [ | Peer-reviewed | N/A | Shorter school week: 4 days instead of 5 |
| Commentary/ Newsletter/Magazine Article | |||
| McGiboney [ | Commentary | DeKalb County, Georgia | Cancel fieldtrips; cancel afterschool activities; distance learning (e.g., cable channel lesson plans, study packets, online lessons) |
| Education Digest [ | Newsletter/ Magazine | National | Move desks apart; cancel classes that bring together children from different classrooms |
| Ash [ | Newsletter/ Magazine | National | Distance learning |
| Surveys of Practices during 2009 H1N1 Pandemic | |||
| Miller [ | Peer-reviewed | Pennsylvania | Cancel activities |
| Nasrullah [ | Peer-reviewed | Georgia | Cancel or postpone activities |
| Rebmann [ | Peer-reviewed | 26 states | Discourage face-to-face meetings in schools |
| Shi [ | Peer-reviewed | Michigan | Rearrange classroom to keep students further apart |
| Dooyema [ | Peer-reviewed | Michigan | Move desks apart; cancel or postpone fieldtrips, performances, practices, after-school programs; divide classes into smaller groups; hold class outdoors (0%); move classes into larger spaces; crowd-reducing methods of transportation (e.g., no busing) |
| Epidemiologic Study | |||
| Stehlé [ | Peer-reviewed | Francea,b | Class closurea, altered schedules to prevent mixinga |
| Sugisaki [ | Peer-reviewed | Japanc | Grade closure; class closure; later start to school day; cancel activities |
a Interventions not tested as described. Discussed in discussion section
b Data collection on face-to-face interactions
c Analysis of school closure data
Most Common Types of School Practices Discussed in Literature to Create Physical Distance Among Students Enrolled in Brick-and-Mortar Public Schools, 2000–2016
| Category | Examples | # (%) ( |
|---|---|---|
| Cancelling or postponing after school activities | Cancel performances, sports practices, or games | 6 (38%) |
| Increasing space among students during in-person instruction | Move class outdoors; re-arrange desks to increase space; divide classes into smaller groups; require that students remain seated while in class | 5 (31%) |
| Canceling classes or activities that occur within the school day with a high rate of mixing/contact | Cancel physical education class; cancel field trips; cancel choir | 5 (31%) |
| Partial closure | Closure of one class; closure of one grade | 4 (25%) |
| Reduced schedule | Shorter school week; shorter school day; students come on alternating days | 3 (19%) |
| Suspending use of common areas | Lunch in class rather than in lunch room; no recess | 2 (13%) |
| Segregating students within common areas | Require that students only eat with classmates in lunchroom; require that students stay in assigned section of school yard | 1 (6%) |
| Reducing the load on common areas through altered scheduling | Let classes out at different times so fewer students are in the hall at any one time | 1 (6%) |
| Implementing standard workplace social distancing measures for teachers and other staff | Reduce face to face meetings; cancel staff meetings | 1 (6%) |
| Reducing mixing during transport | Suspend buses; discourage use of public transportation | 1 (6%) |
Impact of School Practices on Influenza Transmission, 2000–2016
| Article | Type of practice | Impact Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Sugisaki [ | Class closure | Two-day class closure carried out day after 10% absenteeism rate (compared to no class closure or two-day or three-day closures carried out ≥2 days after a 10% absentee rate) is effective for mitigating influenza outbreaks in elementary school; school actions should be conducted at the class level as a basic strategy. |
| Lofgren [ | Suspending use of common areas | Closing the playground and other common areas when 5% of students were symptomatic (compared to requiring symptomatic students to leave school) significantly reduced the total number of infected students. |
| Gemetto [ | Class and grade closure | While the closure of one class yields a smaller mitigation effect than the closure of the whole elementary school, the closure of the corresponding grade (two classes) leads to a reduction of large outbreak probability and a reduction of epidemic size that are similar to those obtained by closing the entire elementary school. |
| Fumanelli [ | Class and grade closure | Reactive gradual (e.g., starting from class-by-class), reactive school-by-school, and county-wide school closure gave comparable outcomes in terms of infection attack rate reduction, peak incidence reduction or peak delay, while national closure of all schools of the country at the same time was not able to reach the same levels of mitigation. |
| Cooley [ | Reduced schedule: 3 day weekend | Using a 3-day weekend as an intervention strategy (compared to a 2-day weekend) could be effective at reducing the peak attack rate for mild epidemics similar in severity to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic. |
| Ridenhour [ | Classroom restriction, hall restriction, schoolyard restriction, lunchroom restriction, different classroom schedules | Classroom restrictions were the best single intervention at lower infection probabilities. At higher transmission rates, employing staggered classroom schedules is the best single intervention. |
State Government Plans that Include Guidance to Local Education Agencies or Schools on Pandemic Influenza Preparedness
| State | Type of plan | Author | Year | Address hygiene | Address school closure | Address distance learning | Listed School Practices to Promote Social Distancing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AL [ | Pandemic Influenza | AL Department of Education | 2014 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Cancel all extra-curricular activities. |
| AK [ | Infectious Disease | AK Department of Health and Social Services | 2013 | Yes | No | No | None listed |
| AZ [ | Pandemic Influenza | AZ Department of Education | 2009 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Incorporate flexible work hours and schedules while also utilizing employee spacing techniques to reduce crowding and close proximity (e.g., staggered shifts, telecommuting, teleconference meetings, separate office spaces). |
| AR [ | Pandemic Influenza | AR Department of Health | 2014 | Yes | Yes | No | 1) Snow days: simultaneous closure of offices, schools, and other non-essential community activities for a specified period of time. |
| CA [ | Pandemic Influenza | CA Department of Education | 2014 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Alternate scheduling |
| CO [ | Pandemic Influenza | CO Department of Public Health | 2009 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| CT [ | Clinical Procedure Guidelines for School Nurses | CT Department of Education | 2012 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| DC [ | General Emergency | DC Department of Education | 2009 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Staggered school times |
| DE [ | General Emergency | DE Department of Education | 2010 | Yes | Yes | No | None listed |
| FL | NG* | ||||||
| GA [ | Pandemic Influenza | GA Department of Education | 2015 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Students’ desks be spaced three (3) feet apart |
| HI | NG* | ||||||
| ID [ | Pandemic Influenza | ID Department of Health and Welfare | 2006 | Yes | Yes | No | None listed |
| IL [ | Pandemic Influenza | IL Department of Public Health | 2006 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| IN [ | Communicable Disease | IN Department of Health, Epidemiology Resource Center | 2015 | Yes | No | No | None listed |
| IA [ | General Emergency | IA Department of Public Health & Iowa Department of Education | 2012 | No | No | No | None listed |
| KS | NG* | ||||||
| KY | NG* | ||||||
| LA [ | Pandemic Influenza | LA Department of Health and Hospitals | 2011 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| ME | NG* | ||||||
| MD [ | Communicable Disease | MD Department of Education; MD Department of Health and Mental Hygiene; MD State School Health Council | 2002 | Yes | No | No | None listed |
| MA | NG* | ||||||
| MI [ | Pandemic Influenza | MI Department of Community Health | 2006 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Cancel extracurricular activities |
| MN | NG* | ||||||
| MS [ | Pandemic Influenza | State of MS | 2013 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| MO [ | Communicable Disease | MO Department of Health and Senior Services | 2011 | Yes | Yes | No | None listed |
| MT [ | Pandemic Influenza | MT Office of Public Instruction | 2007 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| NE [ | General Emergency | NE Department of Health and Human Services | 2012 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| NV | NG* | ||||||
| NH [ | Pandemic Influenza | NH Department of Education, School Health consultant | 2008 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| NJ [ | Pandemic Influenza | NJ Department of Health | 2015 | Yes | Yes | No | None listed |
| NM [ | Pandemic Influenza | NM Public Education Department and Department of Health | 2007 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| NY [ | Pandemic Influenza | NY Department of Health | 2007 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Cancel any non-academic events (in the case of school closure) |
| NC [ | Pandemic Influenza | NC Department of Health and Human Services | UK | No | Yes | No | 1) Reduced school activity calendar |
| ND | NG* | ||||||
| OH [ | Pandemic Influenza | OH Department of Education | 2009 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Cancel non-academic events |
| OK [ | General Emergency | OK Department of Health | UK | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Cancel non-academic events |
| OR [ | Pandemic Influenza | OR Department of Education | 2008 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| PA [ | Pandemic Influenza | PA Department of Health | 2009 | Yes | Yes | No | None listed |
| RI | NG* | ||||||
| SC | NG* | ||||||
| SD | NG* | ||||||
| TN [ | Pandemic Influenza | TN Department of Education and Department of Health | 2009 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Rotating teachers between classrooms while keeping the same group of students in one classroom |
| TX [ | Infectious Disease | TX Association of School Boards | 2014 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Non-essential travel for sports, other competitions, or field trips may be cancelled by a district superintendent or designee. |
| UT [ | Pandemic Influenza | UT Department of Health and Utah Office of Education | 2006 | Yes | Yes | No | 1) Spacing students’ desks three (3) feet apart, in small pods or clusters. |
| VT [ | Pandemic Influenza | VVVT Agency of Human Services | 2008 | No | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| VA [ | Pandemic Influenza | VA Department of Education | 2008 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Move desks further apart |
| WA [ | Infectious Disease | Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction | 2014 | Yes | Yes | No | None listed |
| WV [ | Pandemic Influenza | WV Department of Education | UK | Yes | Yes | Yes | 1) Close non-essential agency functions; |
| WI [ | Pandemic Influenza | WI Department of Public Instruction | 2009 | Yes | Yes | Yes | None listed |
| WY | NG* |
Notes: NG* refers to no guidance to local education agencies or schools that falls within scope; UK: Unknown
Most Common Types of School Practices Included in State-level Guidance Documents to Create Physical Distance Among Students Enrolled in Brick-and-Mortar Public Schools
| Category | Examples | # (%) (n = 16)b |
|---|---|---|
| Canceling or postponing after school activities | Cancel performances, sports practices, or games | 11 (69%) |
| Canceling classes or activities that occur during the school day with a high rate of mixing/contact | Cancel P.E.; cancel field trips; cancel choir | 7 (44%) |
| Reducing mixing during transport | Suspend buses; discourage use of public transportation | 6 (38%) |
| Increasing space among students during in-person instruction | Move class outdoors; re-arrange desks to increase space; divide classes into smaller groups; require students to remain seated in classroom | 5 (31%) |
| Reduced schedule | Shorter school week; shorter school day; students come on alternating days | 4 (25%) |
| Suspending use of common areas | Lunch in classrooms rather than in lunch room; no recess | 4 (25%) |
| Implementing standard workplace social distancing measures for teachers and other staff | Limit face to face meetings; cancel staff meetings | 3 (19%) |
| Partial Closure | Closure of one class; closure of one grade | 2 (13%) |
| Instituting home room staya | Children remain with one group of children all day and teachers rotate through the room | 2 (13%) |
| Segregating students within common areas | Require that students only eat with classmates in lunchroom; require that students stay in assigned section of school yard | 1 (6%) |
| Reducing density/load in common areas through altered scheduling | Let classes out at different times so fewer students are in the hall at any one time | 1 (6%) |
| Limiting visitorsa | Do not allow parents or other visitors; restrict vendor access to school | 1 (6%) |
aSchool practice mentioned only in pandemic plans/guidance and not in the published literature
b16 state-level guidance documents mentioned one or more school practices to promote social distancing