4.3 Article

Social Distancing and Isolation Strategies to Prevent and Control the Transmission of COVID-19 and Other Infectious Diseases in Care Homes for Older People: An International Review

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19063450

Keywords

care homes; COVID-19; infection prevention and control; isolation; older people; social distancing

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research Programme COVID-19 Recovery and Learning Programme [132541]

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Older people in care homes are at high risk of poor health outcomes and mortality if they contract COVID-19 or other infectious diseases. Implementing social distancing and isolation strategies in care homes to prevent transmission has been challenging. This review highlights the lack of empirical evidence and limited policy documentation on these measures. Urgent evaluative research is needed, especially focusing on the well-being of all residents, particularly those with hearing, vision, or cognitive impairments.
Older people living in care homes are at high risk of poor health outcomes and mortality if they contract COVID-19 or other infectious diseases. Measures used to protect residents include social distancing and isolation, although implementation is challenging. This review aimed to assess the social distancing and isolation strategies used by care homes to prevent and control the transmission of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases. Seven electronic databases were searched: Medline, CINAHL, Embase, PsycINFO, HMIC, Social Care Online, and Web of Science Core Collection. Grey literature was searched using MedRxiv, PDQ-Evidence, NICE Evidence Search, LTCCovid19.org and TRIP. Extracted data were synthesised using narrative synthesis and tabulation. 103 papers were included (10 empirical studies, seven literature reviews, and 86 policy documents). Strategies used to prevent and control the transmission of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases included social distancing and isolation of residents and staff, zoning and cohorting of residents, restriction of resident movement/activities, restriction of visitors and restriction of staff working patterns. This review demonstrates a lack of empirical evidence and the limited nature of policy documentation around social distancing and isolation measures in care homes. Evaluative research on these interventions is needed urgently, focusing on the well-being of all residents, particularly those with hearing, vision or cognitive impairments.

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