| Literature DB >> 34161818 |
Alba Mendez-Brito1, Charbel El Bcheraoui2, Francisco Pozo-Martin3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate which non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) have been more and less effective in controlling the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Epidemic; Non-pharmaceutical interventions; SARS-CoV-2; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34161818 PMCID: PMC8214911 DOI: 10.1016/j.jinf.2021.06.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect ISSN: 0163-4453 Impact factor: 38.637
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for the selection of studies.
Setting, outcomes assessed, and NPIs included in the studies.
| Authors and outcome(s) assessed | Setting | NPIs studied |
|---|---|---|
| Banholzer et al. (a) | 20 countries: 15 EU countries, USA, Canada, Australia, Norway and Switzerland | (1) School closing / (2) Border closures / (3) Public event bans / (4) Gathering bans / (5) Venue closing / (6) Lockdowns prohibiting public movements without valid reason / (7) Work bans on non-essential business activities |
| Banholzer et al. (b) | 20 countries: 15 EU countries, USA, Canada, Australia, Norway and Switzerland | (1) School closing / (2) Border closures / (3) Public event bans / (4) Gathering bans / (5) Venue closing / (6) Lockdowns prohibiting public movements without valid reason / (7) Work bans on non-essential business activities |
| Bo et al. | Worldwide, 190 countries | (1) Mandatory face mask in public / (2) Isolation or quarantine |
| Brauner et al. | Worldwide, 41 countries: 34 European and 7 non-European | (1–3) Gatherings limited to 1000/100/10 people or less / (4–5) Some/ All but essential shops closed / (6–7) Schools or universities closed / (8) Stay-at-home orders with exemptions |
| Chaudhry et al. | Worldwide, 50 countries | (1) Travel restrictions: None/ Partial/ Complete border closure / (2) Containment measures: None/ Partial / Complete lockdown / (3) Curfew implemented (stay-at-home orders limited to specific hours) |
| Chernozhukov et al. | USA, all states | (1) Stay at-home / (2) Closed nonessential businesses / (3) Closed K-12 schools / (4) Face mask mandates for employees in public facing businesses |
| Courtemanche et al. | USA, 3138 counties | (1) Shelter-in-place orders / (2) Public school closing / (3) Bans on large social gatherings / (4) Closures of entertainment-related businesses |
| Deb et al. | Worldwide, 129 countries | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closing / (3) Public event cancellations / (4) Gathering restrictions / (5) Public transportation closures / (6) Stay-at-home orders / (7) Restrictions on internal movement / (8) International travel bans |
| Dreher et al. | USA, all states | (1) Stay-at-home orders / (2) Educational facilities closure / (3) Non-essential business closure / (4) Limitations on mass gatherings |
| Duhon et al. | Worldwide, unclear number of territories | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closing / (3) Cancellation of public events / (4) Restrictions on gatherings / (5) Public transit closures / (6) Stay-at-home requirements / (7) Restrictions on internal movement / (8) International travel controls |
| Ebrahim et al. | USA, 1320 counties | (1) Closure of nonessential workplaces / (2) Shelter-in-place/stay-at-home orders / (3) Enforcement of shelter-in-place or stay-at-home / (4) Size restrictions on public gatherings / (5) School closing / (6) Public transport closures / (7) Publicly available testing |
| Esra et al. | Worldwide, 26 countries and 34 US states | (1) Quarantine and isolation policies / (2) Limits on gatherings / (3) School closing (primary, secondary and tertiary educational institutions) / (4) Mask policies / (5) Household confinements (stay-at-home-orders, shelter-in-place orders and lockdowns) |
| Flaxman et al. | Europe, 11 countries | (1) Lockdown / (2) Cancel public events / (3) School closing / (4) Self-isolation / (5) Social distancing encouraged |
| Fountoulakis et al. | Europe, 40 countries | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closing / (3) Public events ban / (4) Gathering ban / (5) Public transport closure / (6) Lockdown implementation / (7) Domestic travel ban / (8) International travel ban |
| Haug et al. | Worldwide, 79 territories, 56 countries | Different categories of NPIs in their hierarchical levels (42,151 measures) |
| Hsiang et al. | China, South Korea, Italy, Iran, France, US | (1) Restricting travel / (2) Social distancing / (3) Quarantine and lockdown / (4) Additional policies |
| Hunter et al. | Europe, 30 countries | (1) Mass gathering restrictions / (2) Initial business closure / (3) Educational facilities closed / (4) Non-essential services closed / (5) Stay-at-home order / (6) Travel severely limited - none European country |
| Islam et al. | Worldwide, 149 countries | (1) Closures of schools / (2) Workplace / (3) Public transport / |
| Jalali et al. | USA, 30 most populous counties and 10 most populous counties of CA, FL, NY and TX | 3 broad categories: |
| Jüni et al. | Worldwide, 144 territories, (not China, South Korea, Iran, Italy) | (1) School closing / (2) Restrictions of mass gatherings / (3) Measures of social distancing |
| Koh et al. | Worldwide, 142 countries | (1) International travel controls (including screening, quarantine and bans on international movement) / (2) Restrictions on mass gatherings (including public event bans and size restrictions on gatherings) / (3) Lockdown-type measures (including workplace closure, internal movement restrictions) |
| Leffler et al. | Worldwide, 200 countries | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closing / (3) Cancel public events / (4) estrictions on gatherings / (5) Close public transport / (6) Stay-at-home requirements / (7) Internal movement restrictions / (8) International travel restrictions / (9) Income support / (10) Public information campaigns / (11) Testing policy / (12) Contact tracing policy / (13) Public wearing of masks |
| Li et al. (a) | Worldwide, 131 countries | (1) Closure of schools / (2) Closure of workplaces / (3) Public events bans / (4) Restrictions on the size of gatherings / (5) Closure of public transport / (6) Stay-at-home orders / (7) Restrictions on internal movement / (8) Restrictions on international travel |
| Li et al. (b) | USA, all states | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closures / (3) Public event cancellations / (4) Public information campaigns / (5) Public transport closures / (6) Stay-at-home orders / (7) International/national travel controls |
| Liu et al. | Worldwide, 130 countries | (1) Internal containment and closure (School and workplace closure, public event cancelation, limits on gathering sizes, public transport closure, stay-at-home requirement, internal movement restriction) / (2) International travel restrictions / |
| Olney et al. | USA, all states | (1) Social distancing encouraged / (2) Schools or universities closing / (3) Public events (ban for more than 100 people)/ (4) Lockdown / (5) Self-isolating ill / (6) Sports (public event ban of more than 1000 people) |
| Papadopoulos et al. | Worlwide, 137 countries | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closing / (3) Cancelling of public events / (4) Restriction on gatherings / (5) Closure of public transport / (6) Stay-at-home restrictions / (7) Domestic travel restrictions / (8) International travel restrictions / |
| Piovani et al. | OECD countries | (1) Mass gathering ban (more than 1000 people) / (2) School closures |
| Pozo-Martin et al. | OECD countries | (1) School closing requirements / (2) Workplace closing requirements / (3) Public events cancelling requirements / (4) Restrictions on gatherings / (5) Public transport restrictions / (6) Stay-at-home requirements / (7) Restrictions on internal travel / (8) International travel controls / (9) Public health information campaigns / (10) Mask wearing requirements / (11) Testing policy / (12) Contact tracing policy |
| Siedner et al. | USA, all states | (1) Social distancing measures (closures of schools, closures of workplaces, cancellations of public events, restrictions on internal movement, closures of state borders) / (2) Internal movement restrictions (shelter-in-place orders, lockdowns) |
| Stokes et al. | Worldwide, 130 countries | (1) School closing / (2) Workplace closing / (3) Public event cancelling / (4) Gathering restrictions / (5) Public transport closure / (6) Stay-at-home requirements / (7) Restrictions on internal movement / (8) International travel controls / (9) Public information campaigns |
| Wibbens et al. | 40 territories: 17 countries and 23 US states | (1) Closing of schools / (2) Closing of workplaces / (3) Public event cancelling / (4) Gathering bans / (5) Public transport closure / (6) Shelter-in-place orders and home confinement / (7) Restrictions on internal movement / (8) Restrictions on international travel / (9) Public information campaigns / (10) Testing access / (11) Contact tracing |
| Wong et al. | Worldwide, 139 countries | (1) School closure / (2) Workplace closure / (3) Public event cancelation / (4) Restrictions on gathering size / (5) Public transport closure / (6) Staying at home requirements / (7) Internal movement restrictions / (8) International travel restrictions / (9) Public information campaigns |
| Zhang et al. | USA, all states | (1) Implementation of shutdowns / (2) Mask mandates |
Fig. 2Heatmap of the assessment of NPIs effectiveness in the studies analysing epidemic growth and incidence-related outcomes. The color grading is given according to the effectiveness ranking of each article. Darker green means higher effectiveness among the NPIs studied in the same article. Gray means no significant association with the outcome. White means the NPI was not studied. If no ranking was established, all the NPIs studied in the same article have the same shade of green. The rating provided is the result of the risk of bias analysis.
Rt = time varying Reproduction number; g = growth rate; IRR1 = incident risk ratio of NPIs on the number of cases; IRR2 = incidence rate ratio; Growth* = epidemic growth expressed as ratios of rate ratios; CI = cumulative incidence. Pozo-Martin et al. 1 and 2: first and second waves.
Fig. 3Heatmap of the assessment of NPIs effectiveness in the studies analysing mortality and death-related outcomes. The color grading is given according to the effectiveness ranking of each article. Darker green means higher effectiveness among the NPIs studied in the same article. Gray means no significant association with the outcome. White means the NPI was not studied. If no ranking was established all the NPIs studied in the same article have the same shade of green. The rating provided is the result of the risk of bias analysis.
g = growth rate; IRR = incident risk ratio of NPIs on the number of deaths; CFR = case fatality rate.