Viral epidemics or pandemics of acute respiratory infections like influenza or severe
acute respiratory syndrome pose a global threat. Antiviral drugs and vaccinations
may be insufficient to prevent their spread.
To review the effectiveness of physical interventions to interrupt or reduce the spread
of respiratory viruses.
We searched The Cochrane Library, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials
(CENTRAL 2010, Issue 3), which includes the Acute Respiratory Infections Group's Specialised
Register, MEDLINE (1966 to October 2010), OLDMEDLINE (1950 to 1965), EMBASE (1990
to October 2010), CINAHL (1982 to October 2010), LILACS (2008 to October 2010), Indian
MEDLARS (2008 to October 2010) and IMSEAR (2008 to October 2010).
In this update, two review authors independently applied the inclusion criteria to
all identified and retrieved articles and extracted data. We scanned 3775 titles,
excluded 3560 and retrieved full papers of 215 studies, to include 66 papers of 67
studies. We included physical interventions (screening at entry ports, isolation,
quarantine, social distancing, barriers, personal protection, hand hygiene) to prevent
respiratory virus transmission. We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cohorts,
case-controls, before-after and time series studies.
We used a standardised form to assess trial eligibility. We assessed RCTs by randomisation
method, allocation generation, concealment, blinding and follow up. We assessed non-RCTs
for potential confounders and classified them as low, medium and high risk of bias.
We included 67 studies including randomised controlled trials and observational studies
with a mixed risk of bias. A total number of participants is not included as the total
would be made up of a heterogenous set of observations (participant people, observations
on participants and countries (object of some studies)). The risk of bias for five
RCTs and most cluster-RCTs was high. Observational studies were of mixed quality.
Only case-control data were sufficiently homogeneous to allow meta-analysis. The highest
quality cluster-RCTs suggest respiratory virus spread can be prevented by hygienic
measures, such as handwashing, especially around younger children. Benefit from reduced
transmission from children to household members is broadly supported also in other
study designs where the potential for confounding is greater. Nine case-control studies
suggested implementing transmission barriers, isolation and hygienic measures are
effective at containing respiratory virus epidemics. Surgical masks or N95 respirators
were the most consistent and comprehensive supportive measures. N95 respirators were
non-inferior to simple surgical masks but more expensive, uncomfortable and irritating
to skin. Adding virucidals or antiseptics to normal handwashing to decrease respiratory
disease transmission remains uncertain. Global measures, such as screening at entry
ports, led to a non-significant marginal delay in spread. There was limited evidence
that social distancing was effective, especially if related to the risk of exposure.
Simple and low-cost interventions would be useful for reducing transmission of epidemic
respiratory viruses. Routine long-term implementation of some measures assessed might
be difficult without the threat of an epidemic.