Affiliation:
1. Department of General Medicine and Division of Infectious Diseases, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, Kerala, India
2. Department of Infection Control and Epidemiology, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, Kerala, India
Abstract
Abstract
Objective:
This study aimed to asses the impact of a physical barrier-based infection prevention and control (IPC) intervention in patient wards at a tertiary care center on patient-to-patient coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) transmission and cluster formation.
Materials and Methods:
A quasi-experimental study was conducted at a 1300-bedded South Indian tertiary care center. Barrier curtains were deployed between ward beds, accompanied by a social interaction protocol, at eight locations, each containing eleven 4-bedded cubicles accommodating 44 patient beds. A surveillance team daily audited adherence to mask usage, barrier curtains, and the social interaction protocol using a predefined checklist. An effective implementation hybrid design was employed to evaluate clinical impact (cluster formation) and implementation effectiveness (adherence to interventions) between the pre-implementation and post-implementation phases.
Results:
During the pre-implementation and post-implementation periods, 2398 and 1024 positive COVID-19 cases were recorded in the selected areas, respectively, with an average monthly positivity rate of 40%. The number of clusters decreased from three clusters with an average of 11.3 positive cases per cluster in the pre-implementation period to no clusters in the post-implementation period. Implementation effectiveness showed compliance rates of 90% for barrier curtain placement and 100% for the social interaction protocol.
Conclusion:
This study confirms that physical barriers, specifically curtains, are effective measures against nosocomial COVID-19 transmission. It underscores the importance of adopting context-specific, cost-effective strategies, especially in low-to-middle-income countries, and provides a strong rationale for further research and implementation of such interventions.