A pragmatic cluster randomised controlled trial of air filtration to prevent symptomatic winter respiratory infections (including COVID-19) in care homes (AFRI-c) in England: Trial protocol

Rachel C M Brierley*, Jodi Taylor, Nicholas Turner, Sophie Rees, Joanna Thorn, Chris Metcalfe, Emily J Henderson, Clare Clement, Tomas J Welsh, Karen Sargent, Gemma Morgan, Derren Ready, Dominic Mellon, Liping Wen, Ruth Kipping, Alastair D Hay

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

Background:
Respiratory tract infections are readily transmitted in care homes. Airborne transmission of pathogens causing respiratory tract illness is largely unmitigated. Portable high-efficiency-particulate-air (HEPA) filtration units capture microbial particles from the air, but it is unclear whether this is sufficient to reduce infections in care home residents. The Air Filtration to prevent symptomatic winter Respiratory Infections (including COVID-19) in care homes (AFRI-c) randomized controlled trial will determine whether using HEPA filtration units reduces respiratory infection episodes in care home residents.

Methods:
AFRI-c is a cluster randomized controlled trial that will be delivered in residential care homes for older people in England. Ninety-one care homes will be randomised to take part for one winter period. The intervention care homes will receive HEPA filtration units for use in communal areas and private bedrooms. Normal infection control measures will continue in all care homes. Anonymised daily data on symptoms will be collected for up to 30 residents. Ten to 12 of these residents will be invited to consent to a primary care medical notes review and (in intervention homes) to having an air filter switched on in their private room. The primary outcome will be number of symptomatic winter respiratory infection episodes. Secondary outcomes include specific clinical measures of infection, number of falls / near falls, number of laboratory confirmed infections, hospitalisations, staff sickness and cost-effectiveness. A mixed methods process evaluation will assess intervention acceptability and implementation.

Discussion:
The results of AFRI-c will provide vital information about whether portable HEPA filtration units reduce symptomatic winter respiratory infections in older care home residents. Findings about effectiveness, fidelity, acceptability and cost-effectiveness will support stakeholders to determine the use of HEPA filtration units as part of infection control policies.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0304488
Number of pages18
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume19
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Jul 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Brierley et al.

Keywords

  • Humans
  • COVID-19/prevention & control
  • England/epidemiology
  • Respiratory Tract Infections/prevention & control
  • Air Filters
  • Seasons
  • Aged
  • SARS-CoV-2/isolation & purification
  • Nursing Homes

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