| Literature DB >> 34360142 |
Carolyn Ingram1, Vicky Downey1, Mark Roe1, Yanbing Chen1, Mary Archibald1, Kadri-Ann Kallas1, Jaspal Kumar1, Peter Naughton1, Cyril Onwuelazu Uteh1, Alejandro Rojas-Chaves1, Shibu Shrestha1, Shiraz Syed1, Fionn Cléirigh Büttner1, Conor Buggy1, Carla Perrotta1.
Abstract
Workplaces can be high-risk environments for SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks and subsequent community transmission. Identifying, understanding, and implementing effective workplace SARS-CoV-2 infection prevention and control (IPC) measures is critical to protect workers, their families, and communities. A rapid review and meta-analysis were conducted to synthesize evidence assessing the effectiveness of COVID-19 IPC measures implemented in global workplace settings through April 2021. Medline, Embase, PubMed, and Cochrane Library were searched for studies that quantitatively assessed the effectiveness of workplace COVID-19 IPC measures. The included studies comprised varying empirical designs and occupational settings. Measures of interest included surveillance measures, outbreak investigations, environmental adjustments, personal protective equipment (PPE), changes in work arrangements, and worker education. Sixty-one studies from healthcare, nursing home, meatpacking, manufacturing, and office settings were included, accounting for ~280,000 employees based in Europe, Asia, and North America. Meta-analyses showed that combined IPC measures resulted in lower employee COVID-19 positivity rates (0.2% positivity; 95% CI 0-0.4%) than single measures such as asymptomatic PCR testing (1.7%; 95% CI 0.9-2.9%) and universal masking (24%; 95% CI 3.4-55.5%). Modelling studies showed that combinations of (i) timely and widespread contact tracing and case isolation, (ii) facilitating smaller worker cohorts, and (iii) effective use of PPE can reduce workplace transmission. Comprehensive COVID-19 IPC measures incorporating swift contact tracing and case isolation, PPE, and facility zoning can effectively prevent workplace outbreaks. Masking alone should not be considered sufficient protection from SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks in the workplace.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; control measures; infection prevention; occupational health and safety; review; workers
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34360142 PMCID: PMC8345343 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18157847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart.
Study characteristics and COVID-19 IPC measures implemented in hospital and other healthcare settings.
| Scheme | Design | Country | Setting | Population | Quality Score/4 a | Infection Prevention and Control Measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | India | Hospital | Residents ( | 2 | In-house, homemade tools for standard operating procedures: face masks, OT gowns |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Canada | Hospital and nursing home residences | HCWs+ ( | 3 | Home-based 7-day control strategy for exposed HCWs, asymptomatic RT-PCR testing |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | Italy | Teaching hospital | Patients and HCWs ( | 2 | Nasal swab qPCR and IgG/IgM antibodies testing |
| [ | Prospective Observational Study | Italy | Hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Separated and dedicated COVID areas, multiple hand hygiene installations, PPE, training protocols, implementation of surveillance system |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Korea | Hospital | HCWs and patients ( | 3 | Universal screening programme |
| [ | Modelling Study | USA | Healthcare facilities | Residents and HCWs ( | LRB b | Routine asymptomatic PCR testing |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Korea | Hospital setting | HCWs ( | 2 | Contact tracing |
| [ | Prospective Observational study | Canada | Tertiary care centre | HCWs (cohort 1: | 3 | Symptomatic/asymptomatic nasopharyngeal swab PCR testing |
| [ | Prospective Observational Study | UK | Hospital setting | Staff ( | 3 | Naso-/oropharyngeal swab and/or immunoassay IgG testing; contact tracing |
| [ | Mathematical Modelling | UK | Not reported | LRB b | Estimate of PCR test sensitivity, sensitivity and specificity of IgG antibody test, positive predictive value of a positive antibody test | |
| [ | Surveillance Study | Taiwan | Hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Online body temperature surveillance, outbreak investigation and management, advising HCWs not to travel |
| [ | Prospective Descriptive Study | Vietnam | Hospital laboratory Setting | Staff members ( | 2 | Risk assessment and management, laboratory training program, self-reporting and electronic reporting of COVID-19 symptoms, PPE stock monitoring system |
| [ | Prospective Seroprevalence Study | Germany | Hospital setting | Clinical and non-clinical MRI staffs ( | 3 | PPE; PCR testing for SARS-CoV-2, anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG and IgM testing |
| [ | Modelling | USA | Hospital | HCW’s ( | LRB b | Nasopharyngeal samples |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | UK | Teaching hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Symptomatic/asymptomatic HCW screening |
| [ | Outbreak Investigation Report | Germany | Maternity and Perinatal centre | Not reported | 2 | Extensive testing; universal face masks; central monitoring of sick leaves; measures to ensure social distancing; continuous on-site visits by hygiene experts and staff training |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | California, USA | Skilled nursing facility | Hospital staff and residents ( | 2 | Targeted testing: point prevalence surveys. |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | Korea | Hospital setting | Patients and HCWs ( | 2 | Nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs, surveillance of people with contact history with confirmed COVID-19 patients. |
| [ | Outbreak Investigation Report | Germany | Tertiary university hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Quarantine of positive HCWs, containment measures including surgical masks; physical distancing, and systematic testing. |
| [ | Cohort Study | China | Tertiary hospital | Patients ( | 2 | Hospital layout adjustments, specialized training, pre-testing and triage, environmental cleansing, PPE |
| [ | Cross-Sectional | France | Hospital | HCW’s ( | 1 | Nasal swab testing, self-isolation, and masks |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Belgium | Hospital | HCWs ( | 2 | SARS-CoV-2 RNA and anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies testing |
| [ | Case-Control study | International | HCWs ( | 1 | Use of respirators for aerosol generating procedures (AGP); PPE use and training | |
| [ | Cross-Sectional | Finland | Tertiary hospitals | HCWs ( | 1 | Social distance of 1 m |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Italy | Hospital | HCWs ( | 2 | Contact tracing, reinforced hygiene practices, PPE, education, and signage |
| [ | Post hoc Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial | Vietnam | Hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Washing method for cloth masks |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Germany | Hospital | Hospital staff ( | 3 | Low-threshold SARS-CoV-2 testing facility |
| [ | Cross-Sectional Study | Spain | Hospital setting | Hospital Workers ( | 2 | Use of PPE |
| [ | Surveillance Study | Italy | Hospital setting | Staff and residents under contract working ( | 3 | Mass screening (oropharyngeal and nasopharyngeal swabs) with/without contact tracing |
| [ | Mathematical Modelling Studies | International | Healthcare setting | HCWs ( | LRB b | Surveillance |
| [ | Modelling Study | USA | Hospital setting | Hospital Workers ( | LRB b | Use of PPE in all healthcare workers. |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | UK | Teaching hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Asymptomatic screening using real-time RT-PCR Symptomatic screening using real-time RT-PCR Symptomatic screening of household contacts |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | USA | Electrophysiology unit | Staff ( | 2 | Universal asymptomatic testing for patients, caregivers, staff, and emergency medical service staff |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | USA | 2 Community hospitals | HCWs ( | 1 | Universal masking |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Italy | Hospital | HCWs ( | 1 | PPE and sanitation guidelines implemented, epidemiological investigation and contact tracing of high-risk HCWs, symptomatic swab testing |
| [ | Prospective Observational Study | Italy | 2 Large hospitals | HCWs (6800) | 3 | Contact tracing and testing of close contacts; random testing |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Japan | Hospital setting | HCWs ( | 1 | PPE (90% compliance) |
| [ | Short-Term Prospective Study | Germany | Tertiary care centre | Staff ( | 3 | Multimodal infection control: strict barrier nursing of known COVID-19 patients, including full PPE, visitor restrictions, universal face masks, universal RT-PCR admission screening of patients |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | Korea | Healthcare setting | Hospital staff ( | 3 | Outbreak investigation surveillance |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | USA | Hospitals | HCWs ( | 3 | Universal masking for HCWs |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | USA | Hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Universal face mask policy |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Singapore | Hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Enforcing reporting of HCWs with acute respiratory illness (ARI) to staff clinic for monitoring; ongoing syndromic surveillance; outbreak investigation and management |
| [ | Prospective Observational Study | Singapore | Hospital | HCWs ( | 3 | Multi-tiered infection control strategy: improved patient segregation and distancing, heightened infection prevention and control measures including universal masking, testing of all symptomatic patients |
| [ | Prospective Observational Study | Singapore | Hospital | Staff ( | 3 | Contact tracing; 14-day phone surveillance and 28-day follow-up of close contacts; testing of symptomatic contacts |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | Malaysia | Hospital | HCWs ( | 2 | Full PPE, which includes an N95 mask, an isolation gown, gloves, eye protection and a head cover when providing care to patients under investigation or confirmed COVID-19 patients, and anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies serological tests |
a Studies scored from 1 to 4 according to experimental design, total study population reported, PCR testing used, and follow-up time reported. Cross-sectional studies automatically scored 1 due to their high risk of bias. b LRB = Low risk of bias according to Checklist for Critical Appraisal and Data Extraction for Systematic Reviews of Prediction Modelling Studies (CHARMS) + HCW = Healthcare worker.
Study characteristics and COVID-19 IPC measures implemented in nursing home settings.
| Study Reference | Design | Country | Population | Quality Score/4 a | Infection Prevention and Control Measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Retrospective Observational Study | France | Staff ( | 2 | Nursing home has enough masks for all residents and staff |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | UK | Nurses, care workers and non-care workers | 2 | Increased PPE: face masks, eye protection |
| [ | Cross-Sectional Study | Belgium | Staff ( | 1 | Anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody testing in addition to RT-PCR testing |
| [ | Modelling | USA | Residents and staff ( | LRB b | Serial testing of asymptomatic persons in response to an outbreak; serial testing of asymptomatic healthcare personnel in the absence of known cases |
| [ | Prospective Observational Study | Germany | Staff ( | 2 | General screening and cohort isolation |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | UK | Care home staff ( | 2 | Nasal swab testing; working in multiple vs. single care home |
| [ | Longitudinal Cohort Study | Massachusetts, USA | Care homes ( | 2 | 6-part intervention: 28-item checklist, payment incentive, on-site and virtual infection control consultation, weekly webinars, continuous question and answer communication, PPE-staffing-testing resources |
| [ | Short-Term Prospective Study | France | Long-term care facilities ( | 2 | Staff compartmentalization within zones; self-assessment scale of the quality of the “barrier” measures |
| [ | Cohort Study | UK | Staff ( | 1 | Implementation of a negative pressure isolation space |
| [ | Case-Series Study | Washington, USA | Staff ( | 1 | Enhanced hygiene practices were implemented |
| [ | Outbreak Investigation | USA | Nursing facilities ( | 3 | Universal asymptomatic testing for patients, caregivers, and staff |
a Studies scored from 1 to 4 according to experimental design, total study population reported, PCR testing used, and follow-up time reported. Cross-sectional studies automatically scored 1 due to their high risk of bias. b LRB = Low risk of bias according to Checklist for Critical Appraisal and Data Extraction for Systematic Reviews of Prediction Modelling Studies (CHARMS).
Study characteristics and COVID-19 IPC measures implemented in other workplace settings.
| Study Reference | Design | Country | Setting | Population | Quality Score/4 a | Infection Prevention and Control Measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Cross-Sectional Study | Italy | Manufacturing facility | Employees ( | 1 | Social distancing, individual hygiene rules, PPE, cleaning and sanitizing of environments, information, and training of workers |
| [ | Prospective Cohort Study | USA | Offices | Employees ( | 2 | Nasal swabs, RT-qPCR measuring antibodies concentration by ELISA |
| [ | Modelling Study | UK | General population | ( | LRB b | Physical distancing, isolation, tracing, and testing |
| [ | Cross-Sectional: Point Prevalence | Belgium, Spain, Italy, France, USA, UK | Offices and industrial buildings | Workplaces ( | 1 | Environmental monitoring |
| [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | USA | Meatpacking facility | Employees ( | 1 | PPE and physical barriers |
a Studies scored from 1 to 4 according to experimental design, total study population reported, PCR testing used, and follow-up time reported. Cross-sectional studies automatically scored 1 due to their high risk of bias. b LRB = Low risk of bias according to Checklist for Critical Appraisal and Data Extraction for Systematic Reviews of Prediction Modelling Studies (CHARMS).
Map of single workplace COVID-19 measures implemented by category.
| Preventive Measures Category | Study Reference |
|---|---|
| Surveillance | |
| Asymptomatic PCR testing | [ |
| Symptomatic PCR testing | [ |
| Symptomatic PCR testing of household contacts | [ |
| RT-PCR testing of staff after environmental monitoring | [ |
| Asymptomatic IgG/IgM immunoassay testing | [ |
| Asymptomatic IgG/IgM immunoassay testing following an outbreak | [ |
| Asymptomatic RT-PCR testing following an outbreak | [ |
| Point prevalence surveys | [ |
| Low-threshold SARS-CoV-2 testing facility | [ |
| Outbreak Investigations and Response | |
| Syndromic surveillance, outbreak investigations | [ |
| Contact tracing | [ |
| Mass screening, contact tracing | [ |
| Contact tracing, testing of close contacts | [ |
| Contact tracing, 14-day phone surveillance, 28-day follow-up of close contacts | [ |
| Asymptomatic RT-PCR prior to patient surgery, contact tracing of exposed HCWS | [ |
| PPE | |
| Cloth masks compared to medical masks | [ |
| Universal masking | [ |
| Homemade tools for standard operating procedures | [ |
| High PPE compliance | [ |
| Adequate PPE supply | [ |
| Masks with and without physical barriers | [ |
| Respirators used instead of surgical masks | [ |
| Eye protection and face protection | [ |
| Education | |
| On-site and virtual infection control consultations | [ |
| Changes in work arrangements | |
| Staff compartmentalization within zones | [ |
| Negative pressure isolation space | [ |
| Restricted worker mobility between facilities | [ |
| Social distancing compliance | [ |
Map of combined workplace COVID-19 measures implemented.
| Combined Preventive Measures. | Study Reference |
|---|---|
| Hospital layout adjustments, training, pre-testing and triage, environmental cleansing, PPE | [ |
| Standard operating procedure, staff training, symptom reporting, enhanced cleaning, inventory monitoring protocols | [ |
| Social distancing, universal masking, testing of all symptomatic patients | [ |
| Home-based 7-day infection control strategy for exposed HCWs—symptomatic, asymptomatic RT-PCR testing | [ |
| General screening and cohort isolation | [ |
| PPE and sanitation guidelines implemented, epidemiological investigation and contact tracing of high-risk HCWs, symptomatic swab testing | [ |
| Integrated infection control strategy: zoning, PPE, mass surveillance | [ |
| PPE, visitor restrictions, universal face masks, universal RT-PCR patient admission screening | [ |
| Hospital shut down, universal testing of all inpatients, medical staff, and employees | [ |
| Systematic testing, social distancing, monitoring of sick leaves, on-site visits by hygiene experts, staff training, direct communication of all measures to personnel and patients | [ |
| Social distancing, surgical masks, systematic testing | [ |
| Regulation of access to the company, social distancing, hygiene and PPE, cleaning and sanitizing of environments, worker education | [ |
| Contact tracing, reinforced hygiene practices, PPE, education, and signage | [ |
Map of modelled workplace COVID-19 measures.
| Modelled Preventive Measures. | Study Reference |
|---|---|
| Variations in employee testing frequency (daily, weekly, bi-weekly, monthly) | [ |
| Variations in testing frequency; outbreak vs. non-outbreak testing | [ |
| Testing and symptomatic isolation; regular screening of high-risk groups; close contact quarantine | [ |
| Non-adaptive combinatorial matrices used for group testing | [ |
| Self-isolation and variations in contact tracing methods; mass testing | [ |
| Variations in PPE use; worker age restrictions | [ |
| Variations in PPE efficacy and testing frequency | [ |
Meta-analysis of COVID-19 positivity rates according to the IPC measures implemented.
| Intervention | No. of Studies |
| Pooled Positivity Rate (%) a,b | 95% CI | Q | I2 | T2 | Egger’s Test c | Egger’s Test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 10 | 25077 | 1.7 e | 0.9, 2.9 | 202.32 | 96% | 0.0025 | <0.01 | 0.09 | 0.93 |
|
| 9 | 6599 | 3.5 e | 0.8, 7.9 | 391.59 | 98% | 0.0191 | <0.01 | ||
|
| 2 | 11684 | 24.0 f | 3.4, 55.5 | 692.34 | 100% | 0.0559 | <0.01 | ||
|
| 15 | 31196 | 0.2 f | 0.0, 0.4 | 68.61 | 80% | 0.0006 | <0.01 | 2.24 | 0.04 |
a Inverse variance method. b Freeman–Tukey double arcsine transformation. c Minimum of 10 studies or greater. d We chose to focus on asymptomatic RT-PCR because positivity rates from other testing interventions—symptomatic testing (naturally high positivity; value is in subsequent contact tracing and case isolations) and antibodies testing (does not capture active COVID-19 infections) —less accurately depict IPC effectiveness. e High positivity = generally more effective (cases effectively captured). f Low positivity = generally more effective (virus effectively prevented/controlled).
Figure 2Meta-analysis of COVID-19 positivity rates in workplaces (14 hospitals and 1 nursing home) following the implementation of combined IPC measures between January and September 2020. Exact interventions implemented by each study are detailed in Table 5. Note that two studies ([64,73]) were classified under the ”Outbreak Investigations and Response” category in Table 4. We have chosen to include them in the Combined Measures meta-analysis due to their comprehensive nature.
Univariable meta-regression results for 15 studies that implemented combined IPC measures between January and September 2020.
| Factor | QM (df) | R2 | Beta coefficient (99% CI) | Standard | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 7.137 (2) | 43% | |||
| Europe vs. Asia | 0.048 (0.0368, 0.0371) | 0.010 |
| ||
| North America vs. Asia | 0.041 (0.0402, 0.0425) | 0.093 | 0.223 | ||
| North America vs. Europe | 0.004 (0.003,0.006) | 0.093 | 0.963 | ||
|
| 43.96 (1) | 12% | −0.0002 (−0.0002, −0.0002) | 0.0001 | 0.214 |
|
| 3.389 (1) | 0% | −0.036 (−0.0358, −0.0353) | 0.019 | 0.066 |
|
| 0.820 (2) | 0% | |||
| Deceleration vs. Acceleration | 0.028 (0.027,0.028) | 0.033 | 0.394 | ||
| Peak vs. Acceleration | 0.005 (0.004,0.005) | 0.023 | 0.848 | ||
|
| |||||
| Asymptomatic RT-PCR testing | 4.961 (1) | 27% | 0.040 (0.0394,0.0399) | 0.018 | 0.023 * |
| Facility Zoning | 0.040 (1) | 0% | 0.004(0.0038,0.0044) | 0.021 | 0.842 |
| Employee Education | 1.610 (1) | 0% | −0.026 (−0.026, −0.026) | 0.020 | 0.205 |
| Environmental Cleaning | 3.733 (1) | 0% | −0.038 (−0.038, −0.038) | 0.020 | 0.053 |
| PPE | 2.133 (1) | 14% | −0.025 (−0.025, −0.025) | 0.017 | 0.144 |
| Syndromic Surveillance | 2.210 (1) | 16% | −0.026 (−0.027, −0.026) | 0.018 | 0.137 |
| Contact Tracing | 0.330 (1) | 0% | −0.012 (−0.012, −0.012) | 0.021 | 0.566 |
|
| 6.102 (1) | 22% | −0.0109 (−0.0110, −0.0108) | 0.004 | 0.014 * |
* p < 0.05 ** p < 0.001. a Significance level set at p < 0.01 after application of Bonferroni correction.
Key findings from studies that modelled the effectiveness of workplace COVID-19 surveillance and combined IPC measures.
| Study | Risk of Bias | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Low |
Asymptomatic testing frequency in a healthcare environment depends on baseline R0 In an environment with R0 = 2.5, testing would have to occur almost every other day to bring R0 below 1 If assuming R0 = 1.5, testing weekly would suffice |
| [ | Low |
Asymptomatic outbreak testing in nursing homes could prevent 54% (weekly testing with 48-h test turnaround) to 92% (daily testing with immediate results and 50% relative sensitivity) of SARS-CoV-2 infections Adding non-outbreak testing could prevent up to an additional 8% of SARS-CoV-2 infections All testing should be combined with high-quality infection control practices |
| [ | Low |
The effectiveness of test and trace depends strongly on coverage and the timeliness of contact tracing Molecular testing can play an important role in prevention of SARS-CoV-2 transmission, especially among healthcare workers and other high-risk groups, but no single testing strategy will reduce |
| [ | Low |
Non-adaptive combinatorial group testing works well at low SARS-CoV-2 prevalence levels; however, performance decreases as prevalence levels increase |
| [ | Low |
A high proportion of cases would need to self-isolate and a high proportion of their contacts to be successfully traced to ensure an effective reproduction number lower than 1 in the absence of other measures. Self-isolation and contact tracing measures would be more likely to achieve control of SARS-CoV-2 transmission if combined with moderate physical distancing measures |
| [ | Low |
Availability of PPE for high-risk HCWs could prevent nearly half of hospital acquired COVID-19 infections Restricting hospital workers above the age of 60 from direct patient care could reduce infections by up to 96% |
| [ | Low |
Effective use of PPE by both HCWs and patients could prevent overwhelmed healthcare systems, while random testing of apparently asymptomatic/pre-symptomatic individuals on a weekly basis was less effective Creating smaller patient/HCW interaction subcohorts can provide additional resilience to outbreak development |
Short description of the effectiveness of selected interventions.
| Study | Intervention Category/Setting | Findings | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Surveillance/Hospital | OR calculation for locations with PCR or antibody positives (2400 environmental swabs) vs. locations without positives (3000 environmental swabs) reveals that locations with coronavirus-positive environmental surfaces had 10 times greater odds ( |
Environmental surface testing results can be used to inform the need for employee testing |
| [ | PPE/Hospital | The risk of COVID-19 infection was more than double among HCWs self-washing their masks compared with the hospital laundry (HR 2.04 (95% CI 1.03 to 4.00); |
Self-washing cloth masks by hand more than doubles the risk of seasonal respiratory illnesses. Double-layered cloth masks washed in the hospital laundry were as protective as medical masks. |
| [ | PPE/Meatpacking | After initiating both universal masking and physical barrier interventions, 8/11 facilities showed a statistically significant reduction in COVID-19 incidence in <10 days. Facilities that only initiated a universal mask policy showed no significant difference before and after the intervention. |
Together, universal masking and physical barriers can prevent COVID-19 transmission in meatpacking plants. These interventions should be accompanied by ventilation enhancements and worker education on mask use and adherence. |
| [ | Education/Nursing home | Special focus facilities ( |
Monitored adherence to infection control processes, especially proper wearing of PPE and cohorting, can reduce weekly infections and mortality. |
| [ | Changes in work arrangements/Nursing home | Long-term care facilities (LTCF) that organized staff compartmentalization within zones were significantly more likely to avoid a COVID-19 outbreak (OR = 0.19 (0.07–0.48)) as were LTCFs whose staff perceived high-quality implementation of preventive measures (OR = 0.65 (0.43–0.98)). |
Staff compartmentalization within zones and high-quality implementation of preventive measures can help prevent COVID-19 outbreaks in LTCFs. |
| [ | Changes in work arrangements/Nursing home | Staff working across different care homes (14/27, 52%) had a 3.0-fold (95% CI, 1.9–4.8; |
Staff should be encouraged and incentivized to work in single care homes and movement of staff across multiple care homes should be limited. Infection control should be extended for all contacts, including those between staff, whilst on the care home premises. |