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Respective role of non-pharmaceutical interventions on bronchiolitis outbreaks, an interrupted time series analysis based on a multinational surveillance system.

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posted on 2022-12-19, 09:52 authored by Lea Lenglart, Naim Ouldali, Kate Honeyford, Zsolt Bognar, Silvia Bressan, Danilo Buonsenso, Liviana Da Dalt, Tisham De, Ruth Farrugia, Ian K Maconochie, Henriette A Moll, Rianne Oostenbrink, Niccolo Parri, Damian Roland, Katy Rose, Esra Akyüz Özkan, François Angoulvant, Camille Aupiais, Clarissa Barber, Michael Barrett, Romain Basmaci, Susana Castanhinha, Antonio Chiaretti, Sheena Durnin, Patrick Fitzpatrick, Laszlo Fodor, Borja Gomez, Susanne Greber-Platzer, Romain Guedj, Florian Hey, Lina Jankauskaite, Daniela Kohlfuerst, Ines Mascarenhas, Anna Maria Musolino, Zanda Pučuka, Sofia Reis, Alexis Rybak, Petra Salamon, Matthias Schaffert, Keren Shahar-Nissan, Maria Chiara Supino, Ozlem Teksam, Caner Turan, Roberto Velasco, Ruud G Nijman, Luigi Titomanlio, EPISODES Study Group, Vanda Anacleto, Orkun Aydin, Elena Bellelli, Ron Berant, Thibault De Groc, Sara Geitoeira, Florian Hoffmann, Franziska Leeb, Fiona Leonard, Mark Lyttle, Lia Mano, Vytenis Masillonis, Rosa Morello, Francisa Saraiva, Gabor Simon, Ines Silva Costa, Joao Sous Marques, Jonas Thüminger, Corinne Vasilico, Anna Chiara Vittucci, Christoph Zurl

Background Bronchiolitis is a major source of morbimortality among young children worldwide. Non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) implemented to reduce the spread of SARS-CoV-2 may have had an important impact on bronchiolitis outbreaks, as well as major societal consequences. Discriminating between their respective impacts would help define optimal public health strategies against bronchiolitis. We aimed to assess the respective impact of each NPI on bronchiolitis outbreaks in 14 European countries.


Methods We conducted a quasi-experimental interrupted time-series analysis based on a multicentre international study. All children diagnosed with bronchiolitis presenting to the paediatric emergency department of one of the 27 centres from January 2018 to March 2021 were included. We assessed the association between each NPI and change in the bronchiolitis trend over time by seasonally adjusted multivariable quasi-Poisson regression modelling.


Results In total, 42 916 children were included. We observed an overall cumulative 78% reduction (95%CI [−100;−54], p<0.0001) in bronchiolitis cases following NPI implementation. The decrease varied between countries from −97% (95%CI [−100;−47], p=0.0005) to −36% (95%CI [−79;+07], p=0.105). Full lockdown (IRR 0.21, 95%CI [0.14;0.30], p<0.001), secondary-school closure (IRR 0.33, 95%CI [0.20;0.52], p<0.0001), wearing a mask indoors (IRR 0.49, 95%CI [0.25;0.94], p=0.034), and teleworking (IRR 0.55, 95%CI [0.31;0.97], p=0.038) were independently associated with reducing bronchiolitis.


Conclusion Several NPIs were associated with a reduction of bronchiolitis outbreaks, including full lockdown, school closure, teleworking and facial masking. Some of these public health interventions may be considered to further reduce the global burden of bronchiolitis.

Funding

N.O. is supported by the ESPID 2021-2023 Fellowship Award, R.G.N by the NIHR ACL 2018-021-007 award and K.H by the NIHR [HS&DR] Project: NIHR129082

History

Author affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

The European respiratory journal

Volume

60

Issue

6

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

issn

0903-1936

eissn

1399-3003

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-12-19

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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