Compliance With a Multilayered Nonpharmaceutical Intervention in an Urban Elementary School Setting
- 1 July 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Public Health Management & Practice
- Vol. 16 (4) , 316-324
- https://doi.org/10.1097/phh.0b013e3181cb4368
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine to what extent school-aged children can learn hygiene-based nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) and persist in these behavioral changes over the duration of an influenza season. If this can be done successfully, it may be a preferable pandemic mitigation strategy to much more disruptive strategies such as whole-scale school closure. The Pittsburgh Influenza Prevention Project (PIPP) is a prospective, controlled, randomized trial of the effectiveness of a suite of hygiene-based NPIs in controlling influenza and related illnesses in elementary schools in the City of Pittsburgh. During the 2007-08 school year, the project measured adoption of NPIs by students in five elementary schools through surveys of home-room teachers before, during, and after influenza season. Results showed highly statistically significant improvement in students' daily practice of nearly all of the NPIs, including hand washing and sanitizer use and covering coughs and sneezes. The study provides evidence that children can learn, implement, and persist in the behaviors of a multilayered suite of NPIs over a typical flu season. These results will be useful to public health policy makers and practitioners considering methods of infectious disease prevention in school-based settings.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Using Nonpharmaceutical Interventions to Prevent Influenza Transmission in Elementary School ChildrenJournal of Public Health Management & Practice, 2009
- Reducing Absenteeism From Gastrointestinal and Respiratory Illness in Elementary School Students: A Randomized, Controlled Trial of an Infection-Control InterventionPediatrics, 2008
- Inexpensive and Time‐Efficient Hand Hygiene Interventions Increase Elementary School Children’s Hand Hygiene RatesJournal of School Health, 2008
- Expert judgments of pandemic influenza risksGlobal Public Health, 2006
- Healthy Hands: Use of Alcohol Gel as an Adjunct to Handwashing in Elementary School ChildrenThe Journal of School Nursing, 2004
- The Effects of Alcohol Hand Sanitizer on Elementary School AbsencesAmerican Journal of Infection Control, 2004
- The effect of a comprehensive handwashing program on absenteeism in elementary schoolsAmerican Journal of Infection Control, 2002
- Childhood Asthma and Indoor Allergens: The Classroom May Be a CulpritThe Journal of School Nursing, 2001
- Reduction of Illness Absenteeism in Elementary Schools Using an Alcohol-free Instant Hand SanitizerThe Journal of School Nursing, 2001
- Effect of hand sanitizer use on elementary school absenteeismAmerican Journal of Infection Control, 2000