Abstract

Increasing personal protective behaviours is critical for stopping the spread of respiratory viruses, including SARS-CoV-2: We need evidence to inform how to achieve this. We aimed to synthesize evidence on interventions to increase six personal protective behaviours (e.g., hand hygiene, face mask use, maintaining physical distancing) to limit the spread of respiratory viruses. We used best practice for rapid evidence reviews. We searched Ovid MEDLINE and Scopus. Studies conducted in adults or children with active or passive comparators were included. We extracted data on study design, intervention content, mode of delivery, population, setting, mechanism(s) of action, acceptability, practicability, effectiveness, affordability, spill-over effects, and equity impact. Study quality was assessed with Cochrane's risk-of-bias tool. A narrative synthesis and random-effects meta-analyses were conducted. We identified 39 studies conducted across 15 countries. Interventions targeted hand hygiene (n = 30) and/or face mask use (n = 12) and used two- or three-arm study designs with passive comparators. Interventions were typically delivered face-to-face and included a median of three behaviour change techniques. The quality of included studies was low. Interventions to increase hand hygiene (k = 6) had a medium, positive effect (d = .62, 95% CI = 0.43-0.80, p < .001, I2 = 81.2%). Interventions targeting face mask use (k = 4) had mixed results, with an imprecise pooled estimate (OR = 4.14, 95% CI = 1.24-13.79, p < .001, I2 = 89.67%). Between-study heterogeneity was high. We found low-quality evidence for positive effects of interventions targeting hand hygiene, with unclear results for interventions targeting face mask use. There was a lack of evidence for most behaviours of interest within this review.

Highlights

  • Respiratory viruses such as influenza, respiratory syncytial virus, parainfluenza, rhinovirus, coronavirus, and adenovirus enter the body through the eyes, nose, and mouth (Killingley & Nguyen-Van-Tam, 2013; West, Michie, Rubin, & Amlo^t, 2020)

  • The relative importance of different personal protective behaviours depends on properties of the specific respiratory virus in addition to the clinical and/or environmental context – for example, fomite transmission may be more pronounced for respiratory syncytial virus compared with coronaviruses (Boone & Gerba, 2007) – at the time of planning this rapid review, little was known about the properties of SARS-CoV-2, and we opted for an inclusive scope

  • Quality of included studies One study received an overall rating of ‘low risk of bias’, with 16 studies rated as ‘some concern’, 18 as ‘high risk of bias’, and for four studies, an overall rating could not be applied. This rapid review of interventions to increase personal protective behaviours to limit the spread of respiratory viruses identified 39 studies conducted across 15 countries

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Summary

Introduction

Respiratory viruses such as influenza, respiratory syncytial virus, parainfluenza, rhinovirus, coronavirus (including SARS-CoV-2), and adenovirus enter the body through the eyes, nose, and mouth (the ‘T-Zone’) (Killingley & Nguyen-Van-Tam, 2013; West, Michie, Rubin, & Amlo^t, 2020). Changing human behaviour is critical for stopping the spread of respiratory viruses in general and the SARS-CoV-2 virus in particular, and for supporting the easing of financially and psychologically costly physical distancing measures during viral epidemics (Ferguson et al, 2006; Michie, Rubin, & Amlo^t, 2020; Michie, West, & Amlo^t, 2020; West et al, 2020). Personal protective behaviours, including hand washing, disinfecting fomites such as clothes or furniture, and face mask wearing, are advocated for limiting the spread of SARS-CoV-2 (Lunn et al, 2020; World Health Organization, 2019). We adopted best practice for rapid evidence reviews to evaluate the acceptability, practicability, effectiveness, affordability, spill-over effects (i.e., unintended consequences), and equity impact (the ‘APEASE’ criteria (Michie, Atkins, & West, 2014)) of interventions to increase personal protective behaviours to limit the spread of respiratory viruses

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