Staff testing in care homes for older people: policy implications for early stages of future pandemic responses

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Abstract

Background

Care home residents are at high risk of severe outcomes following respiratory infection due to age, co-morbidities, and close contact with staff and other residents. Frequent staff testing could potentially reduce respiratory infection cases in residents, but evidence is limited. This study uses historical COVID-19 data in England to assess the impact of varying staff testing rates under different transmission scenarios to inform response during future pandemics.

Methods

We developed a compartmental model of SARS-CoV-2 transmission in England, with three population strata: general population, care home staff, and residents. The model was calibrated using prevalence data from January 2021 to March 2022 and testing rates from the VIVALDI Study ( ISRCTN14447421 ). We conducted a scenario analysis projecting resident cases and deaths over 12 months under varying staff testing frequencies (monthly, twice-monthly, weekly, twice-weekly, daily) assuming a new dominant strain. We also explored the impact of testing when combined with a hypothetical low-cost highly-effective public health and social measures.

Findings

Staff testing alone has little impact on reducing cases and deaths in the resident population. Daily testing could avert only 3.8% (95%UI: 3.1-4.4%) cases and 3.5% (95%UI: 2.3-4.4%) deaths compared to a baseline testing of less than one test per month. When combined with public health and social measures, however, the effect is large. Daily staff testing, combined with public health and social measures, can reduce resident cases by 54% (95%UI: 50-58%) and deaths by 50% (95%UI: 26-59%). Additionally, if testing frequency is reduced but there is still a public health and social measure, the effect size decreases, however there are potential cost savings (£0.7 to £3.4 million).

Interpretation

Increasing staff testing alone is insufficient to significantly reduce SARS-CoV-2 cases and deaths in care home residents. However, combining testing with some form of a public health and social measure aimed at reducing transmission among residents, is epidemiologically effective and cost-effective in most scenarios and possibly cost saving.

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