Appendix D1: Interventions for Community Containment
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Supplement D: Community Containment Measures, Including Non-Hospital Isolation and Quarantine
Public Health Guidance for Community-Level Preparedness and Response to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) Version 2/3
Contacts of SARS patients can be managed by use of a range of interventions, all of which are designed to facilitate early recognition of illness in persons at greatest risk of becoming infected and thereby to prevent transmission to others. Whereas many of these interventions are applied individually to persons identified as contacts of a person with possible or known SARS-CoV disease, others are applied to larger groups of persons, or communities, who share a similar risk of exposure. The interventions include the following:
Passive Monitoring
Definition
- The contact is asked to perform self-assessment at least twice daily and to contact authorities immediately if respiratory symptoms or fever occur
Application
- Situations in which 1) the risk of exposure and subsequent development of disease is low, and 2) the risk to others if recognition of disease is delayed is also low.
Benefits
- Requires minimal resources
- Places few constraints on individual freedoms
Challenge
- Relies on self-reporting
- Affected persons may not perform an adequate self-assessment
Resources Required
- Supplies (thermometer; symptom log; written instructions)
- Hotline to notify authorities about symptoms or needs
- Staff to receive telephone reports and provide in-person
evaluation and care
Partners
- Household members
Forms/Templates
- Symptom logs
- Instructions for patients and healthcare workers
Active Monitoring without Explicit Activity Restrictions
Definition
- A healthcare or public health worker evaluates the contact on a regular (at least daily) basis by phone and/or in person for signs and symptoms suggestive of SARS-CoV disease
Application
- Situations in which 1) the risk of exposure to and subsequent development of disease is moderate to high, 2) resources permit close observation of individuals, and 3) the risk of delayed recognition of symptoms is low to moderate
Benefits
- Places few constraints on individual liberties
Challenges
- Requires adequate staffing
- Requires a system to track information and to verify monitoring
and appropriate actions based on findings
Resources Required
- Trained staff to provide in-person and/or telephone evaluations
- Contingency plans for managing noncompliant persons
- Contingency plans for rapid isolation of persons who develop
symptoms - Hotline to notify authorities about symptoms or needs
Partners
- Professional and lay healthcare workers to perform evaluations on behalf of the health department
- Possible need for law enforcement to assist with
management of noncompliant persons
Forms/Template
- Checklist for assessment of active monitoring
- Template for recording results of clinical evaluation
Active Monitoring with Activity Restrictions (Quarantine)
Definition
- The contact remains separated from others for a specified period (generally 10 days after potential exposure), during which s/he is assessed on a regular basis (in person at least once daily) for signs and symptoms of SARS-CoV disease. Persons with fever, respiratory, or other early SARS-CoV symptoms (see MMWR 52(49):1202-1206) require immediate evaluation by a trained healthcare provider. Restrictions may be voluntary or legally mandated; confinement may be at home or in an appropriate facility.No specific precautions are required for those sharing the household with a person in quarantine as long as the person remains asymptomatic. However, because onset of symptoms may be insidious, it may be prudent to minimize interactions with household members during the period of quarantine.
Application
- Situations in which the risk of exposure and subsequent development of disease is high and the risk of delayed recognition of symptoms is moderate
Benefits
- Reduces risk of spread from persons with subacute or subclinical presentations or from delayed recognition of symptoms
Challenges
- Infringes on personal freedom of movement
- May lead to a feeling of isolation from family and friends
- May lead to loss of income or employment
- Requires plans/protocols for provision of essential services
- Requires plan for provision of mental health support
- Risk of noncompliance, particularly as duration increases
- May require enforcement for noncompliance
Resources Required
- Staff for monitoring and evaluation
- Appropriate facility if home setting is unavailable or inadequate
Staff, funding, goods for provision of essential services - Hotline for notification of symptoms or personal needs
- Mechanisms to communicate with family members outside the household or facility
- Mental health and social support services
- Delivery systems for food and other essential supplies
Partners
- Professional and lay healthcare workers to perform assessments on behalf of the health department
- Community volunteers/workers to assist with provision of essential services
- Potential need for law enforcement to assist with noncompliant persons
Forms/Templates
- Checklist for active monitoring
- Template for recording results of clinical evaluation
- Checklist and guidelines for evaluation of homes for quarantine
- Checklist and guidelines for evaluation of community-based sites for quarantine
- Guidelines for monitoring compliance with home quarantine
- Guidelines for monitoring compliance with quarantine in community-based facilities
- Forms for recording compliance with quarantine
Examples
- Home quarantine (voluntary or mandatory)
- Facility quarantine (voluntary or mandatory)
Working Quarantine
Definition
- Persons are permitted to work but must observe activity restrictions while off duty. Monitoring for fever and other symptoms before reporting for work is usually required. Use of appropriate PPE while at work is required.
Application
- Persons for whom activity restrictions (home or facility quarantine) are indicated but who provide essential services (e.g., healthcare workers)
Benefits
- Reduces risk of community spread from high-risk contacts while minimizing adverse impact of activity restrictions on provision of essential services
- Clinical monitoring at work reduces the staff required for active monitoring at the quarantine site
Challenges
- Need for close and consistent pre-shift monitoring at the work site to prevent inadvertent exposures
- May require means of transporting persons to and from work site to minimize interactions; persons in working quarantine should wear appropriate PPE during transport
- Must maintain close cooperation and communication between work-site and local health authorities
Resources Required
- Appropriate facility for off-duty quarantine if home is unavailable or inadequate
- Staff, funding, goods for provision of essential services
- Hotline for notification of symptoms and personal needs
- System to track results of work-site monitoring and location(s) of off-duty quarantine
- Mental health and psychosocial support services, especially if work includes care of SARS patients
Partners
- Work-site administrators and infection control personnel
- Community volunteers/workers
- Staff/volunteers to assist with transportation to and from work
- Potential need for law enforcement to assist with noncompliant persons
Forms/Templates
- Guidelines and instructions for persons in working quarantine
- Instructions for supervisors of persons in working quarantine
- Checklist to evaluate homes for quarantine
- Guidelines for monitoring compliance
- Checklist for active monitoring at work site
- Template for recording results of clinical evaluation
- Forms for recording compliance
Focused Measures to Increase Social Distance
Definition
- Intervention applied to specific groups, designed to reduce interactions and thereby transmission risk within the group. When focused, the intervention is applied to groups or persons identified in specific sites or buildings, most but not necessarily all of whom are at risk of exposure to SARS-CoV
Application
- Groups or settings where transmission is believed to have occurred, where the linkages between cases is unclear at the time of evaluation, and where restrictions placed only on persons known to have been exposed is considered insufficient to prevent further transmission
Benefits
- Applied broadly, reduces the requirement for urgent evaluation of large numbers of potential contacts to determine indications for activity restrictions.
- May enable reductions in transmission among groups of persons without explicit activity restrictions (quarantine)
Challenges
- May be difficult to solicit cooperation, particularly if popular buildings are closed or popular events are cancelled
- Requires excellent communication mechanisms to notify affected persons of details and rationale
- May need to provide replacement for affected activities (e.g., school, essential services)
- Generally relies on passive monitoring
Resources Required
- Systems to communicate relevant messages
- May require enforcement, particularly if closure of popular buildings or gathering places is necessary
- Requires resources for passive monitoring
- Hotlines to report symptoms and obtain follow-up instructions
- Transportation for medical evaluation, with appropriate infection control precautions
Partners
- News media and communication outlets
- Law enforcement
- Community groups
Forms/Templates
- Messages for affected persons
- Messages for employers of affected persons
- Messages for persons supplying essential services
Examples
- Closure of schools or office buildings
- Suspension of public markets
Community-Wide Measures to Increase Social Distance
Definition
- Intervention applied to an entire community or region, designed to reduce personal interactions and thereby transmission risk. The prototypical example is implementation of a “snow day,” in which offices, schools, transportation systems are cancelled as for a major snowstorm.
Application
- All members of a community in which 1) extensive transmission of SARS-CoV is occurring, 2) a significant number of cases lack clearly identifiable epidemiologic links at the time of evaluation, and 3) restrictions on persons known to have been exposed are considered insufficient to prevent further spread
Benefits
- Reduces need for urgent evaluation of large numbers of potential contacts to determine indications for activity restrictions
- May enable reductions in transmission among groups without explicit activity restrictions (quarantine)
- “Snow days” are familiar concepts and thus easy to implement on short notice
Challenges
- May be difficult to solicit cooperation
- Requires excellent communication mechanisms to notify persons of details and rationale
- May need to provide replacement for affected activities (e.g., school, essential services)
- May need to address mental health and financial support issues
- When an entire community is involved, requires cooperation with neighboring jurisdictions that may not be using a similar intervention, particularly in situations where persons live in one city and work in another and only one locale is affected by the intervention.
- Generally relies on passive monitoring
Resources Required
- Communication outlets
- Enforcement
- Resources for passive monitoring
- Hotlines and other communication systems to report symptoms and obtain follow-up instructions
- Transportation for persons requiring medical evaluation, with appropriate infection control precautions
Partners
- News media and other communication outlets
- Law enforcement
- Transportation officials to enforce restrictions (e.g., closure of bridges, roads, or mass transit systems), plan detours, and maintain critical infrastructure supplies
Forms/Templates
- Messages for affected persons
- Messages for employers of affected persons
- Messages for persons supplying essential services
Examples
- Community-wide “snow day”
- Scaling back of mass transportation
- Closure of bridges and tunnels
- Closure of schools and work sites
Widespread Community Quarantine, Including Cordon Sanitaire
Definition
- Legally enforceable order that restricts movement into or out of the area of quarantine of a large group of people or community; designed to reduce the likelihood of transmission of SARS-CoV among persons in and to persons outside the affected the area. When applied to all inhabitants of an area (typically a community or neighborhood), the intervention is referred to as cordon sanitaire (sanitary barrier).
Application
- All members of a group in which 1) extensive transmission is occurring, 2) a significant number of cases lack identifiable epidemiologic links at the time of evaluation, and 3) restrictions placed on person known to have been exposed are considered insufficient to prevent further spread. Widespread quarantine is unlikely to be necessary because other less restrictive measures (e.g., snow days) may be equally effective.
Benefits
- Reduces need for urgent evaluation of large numbers of potential contacts to determine indications for activity restrictions
Challenges
- Most extreme of the potential containment measures
- May be controversial because of infringement on personal liberties
- May be difficult to solicit cooperation for extended periods, particularly if the rationale is not readily apparent or was not clearly explained
- Requires excellent communication mechanisms to inform affected persons and to maintain public confidence in the appropriateness of the chosen course of action
- May need to provide replacements for affected activities (e.g., school, essential service providers)
- Must address mental health and financial support for affected population
- When an entire community is involved, requires cooperation with neighboring jurisdictions that may not be using a similar intervention, particular in situations where persons live in one city and work in another and only one locality is affected by the intervention
- Generally relies on passive monitoring
- Need to provide mechanisms for isolating symptomatic persons with minimal delay
Resources Required
- Systems to communicate relevant messages
- Will likely require enforcement to maintain security at borders
- Resources for passive monitoring
- Transportation for persons requiring medical evaluation, with appropriate infection control precautions
- Staff and supplies to maintain access to and availability of essential services and goods, including food, water, medicine, medical care, utilities
- Plan to divert flow of critical infrastructure supplies and materials that normally transit through quarantined area
Partners
- News media and other mass communication outlets
- Public and private groups, industries, and officials to coordinate supply and provision of essential services to affected area
- Law enforcement to maintain security at borders and to enforce movement restrictions
- Transportation industry
Forms/Templates
- Messages for affected persons
- Messages for employers of affected persons
- Messages for persons supplying essential services
Examples
- Quarantine (cordon sanitaire) of a city or town
- Quarantine of occupants of a housing complex or office building
Related Pages
- Summary
- I. Rationale and Goals
- II. Lessons Learned
- III. Management of SARS Patients in Isolation
- IV. Management of Contacts of SARS Cases
- V. Community-Based Control Measures
- VI. Enforcement of Community Containment Measures
- VII. Roles and Responsibilities
- Appendix D1: Interventions for Community Containment
- Appendix D2: Frequently Asked Questions about Use of Community Containment Measures
- Appendix D3: Guidelines for Evaluating Homes and Facilities for Isolation and Quarantine
- Appendix D4: Threshold Determinants for the Use of Community Containment Measures
- Appendix D5: Preparedness Checklist for Community Containment Measures