Fadlallah Racha, El-Jardali Fadi, Karroum Lama Bou, Kalach Nour, Hoteit Reem, Aoun Andrew, Al-Hakim Lara, Verdugo-Paiva Francisca, Rada Gabriel, Fretheim Atle, Lewin Simon, Ludolph Ramona, Akl Elie A
Center for Systematic Reviews for Health Policy and Systems Research American University of Beirut Beirut Lebanon.
Department of Health Management and Policy American University of Beirut Beirut Lebanon.
Cochrane Evid Synth Methods. 2024 Apr 29;2(5):e12055. doi: 10.1002/cesm.12055. eCollection 2024 May.
To systematically review the effectiveness and unintended health and socioeconomic consequences of public health and social measures (PHSM) aimed at reducing the scale and risk of transmission of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
This review followed guidance about overviews of reviews in the and used the Epistemonikos database's COVID-19 Living Overview of Evidence repository as a primary search source. Methodological quality was evaluated using the Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR 2) checklist.
A total of 94 reviews were included, of which eight (9%) had "moderate" to "high" confidence ratings on the AMSTAR 2. Of 16 reviews (17%) reporting applying the GRADE framework, none found high certainty evidence for any of our outcomes of interest. Across the 94 reviews, the most frequently examined PHSM were personal protection ( = 18, 19%). Within multicomponent interventions, so-called "lockdown" was the most frequently examined component ( = 39, 41%). The most frequently reported outcome category was non-COVID-19-related health outcomes ( = 58, 62%). Only five (5%) reviews reported on socioeconomic outcomes. Findings from the eight reviews with moderate or high confidence ratings on AMSTAR 2 are narratively summarized. There is low-certainty evidence that multicomponent interventions may reduce the transmission of COVID-19 in different settings. For active surveillance and response measures, low-certainty evidence suggests that routine testing of residents and staff in long-term care facilities may reduce the number of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths among residents. We found very low-certainty evidence about the effectiveness of personal protection measures, travel-related control measures, and environmental measures. Unintended consequences were rarely examined by those eight reviews.
We found predominantly low- to very low-certainty evidence regarding the effectiveness and unintended consequences of PHSM in controlling the risk and scale of COVID-19 transmission. There is a need to improve the conduct and reporting of systematic reviews.
系统评价旨在降低2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)传播规模和风险的公共卫生与社会措施(PHSM)的有效性以及意外的健康和社会经济后果。
本综述遵循关于综述概述的指南,并使用Epistemonikos数据库的COVID-19证据动态综述库作为主要搜索来源。使用评估系统评价的测量工具(AMSTAR 2)清单评估方法学质量。
共纳入94篇综述,其中8篇(9%)在AMSTAR 2上的置信度评级为“中等”至“高”。在16篇(17%)报告应用GRADE框架的综述中,没有一篇发现我们任何感兴趣结局的高确定性证据。在这94篇综述中,最常研究的PHSM是个人防护(n = 18,19%)。在多成分干预措施中,所谓的“封锁”是最常研究的成分(n = 39,41%)。最常报告的结局类别是非COVID-19相关的健康结局(n = 58,62%)。只有5篇(5%)综述报告了社会经济结局。对AMSTAR 2置信度评级为中等或高的8篇综述的结果进行了叙述性总结。有低确定性证据表明多成分干预措施可能在不同环境中减少COVID-19的传播。对于主动监测和应对措施,低确定性证据表明对长期护理机构的居民和工作人员进行常规检测可能减少居民中的感染、住院和死亡人数。我们发现关于个人防护措施、旅行相关控制措施和环境措施有效性的证据确定性非常低。这8篇综述很少研究意外后果。
我们发现关于PHSM在控制COVID-19传播风险和规模方面的有效性及意外后果的证据大多为低至非常低的确定性。有必要改进系统评价的实施和报告。