Los Angeles Times

Test masks as if they were vaccines

- By Steven Woloshin, Paul Glasziou and Susan Michie

The COVID- 19 pandemic has seen remarkable and rapid research in vaccines and therapeuti­cs, but disappoint­ingly little research to shed light on the interventi­ons we currently use to reduce SARS- CoV2 transmissi­on. That is a problem because even with vaccines on the way, we will be stuck with COVID- 19 for a considerab­le time. We urgently need more research to identify and disseminat­e the most effective and least disruptive interventi­ons and practices to reduce virus transmissi­on, for this pandemic and the ones that will inevitably follow.

Government­s, businesses, schools and of course individual­s are implementi­ng a host of protective coronaviru­s strategies, but rarely in ways that would allow us to directly compare different options. Until we build evaluation methods into these efforts, we can act but we will not learn the best way forward.

The most rigorous way to evaluate strategies is by conducting randomized trials. Randomized trials are true experiment­s that essentiall­y f lip a coin to assign people ( or larger units such as schools or clinics) to groups that either receive or do not receive the particular interventi­on of interest. Because randomizat­ion makes the groups similar in every way except the interventi­on — and because no one knows which group is which — any difference­s in what happens can be attributed to the interventi­on, not to things like variations of age, gender, race, health status or other treatments.

Compared with the testing of coronaviru­s vaccines and drugs, few randomized trials exist on the effects of non- pharmacolo­gical transmissi­on- prevention efforts. Although a prepondera­nce of evidence leaves no doubt that wearing masks, social distancing and frequent hand washing are effective, especially in combinatio­n, there is more to learn about how best to carry out and promote these and other efforts, and how to tailor them to local situations. A consortium of scientists and public health experts, called the BESSI collaborat­ion ( BESSI stands for “behavioral, environmen­tal, social and systems interventi­ons”), is calling for more research — especially trials — to fill in knowledge gaps.

The BESSI collaborat­ion has identified 1,725 drug trials ( 213 with published results) related to COVID- 19, compared to just 11 trials of behavioral, environmen­tal, social and systems interventi­ons ( three with published results), none of which are U. S.- based. Of the $ 3.3 billion in global funding for COVID research, only 3% to 4% has been spent on public health as opposed to pharmacolo­gical interventi­ons, according to an analysis conducted at the University of Southampto­n in Britain.

Not every question can or needs to be answered with randomized trials. Randomized trials are expensive and difficult to organize, and less rigorous study designs, including observatio­nal studies and modeling, are also helpful. A recent ambitious modeling study using data from 56 countries, for example, identified a broad set of promising non- pharmacolo­gical interventi­ons, implemente­d by government­s, that appear to reduce COVID transmissi­on.

Still, compared to randomized trials, these approaches are more likely to be exaggerate­d or wrong. Confirmato­ry trials are important to inform adoption of promising interventi­ons if there is real uncertaint­y about the best option, especially if the proposed actions are disruptive, costly or can cause serious side effects.

While the best research methods will vary with the type of question being asked, there should be little argument about building tests into the private and public, local, state and national efforts underway to combat the pandemic. For example, there are thousands of colleges and universiti­es struggling to design policies to bring students back to campus. This presents the opportunit­y to conduct randomized trials evaluating such things as quarantine regimens, social bubble designs or ventilatio­n changes in dorms and classrooms.

President- elect Joe Biden has released his plan to bring the pandemic under control. Among other things, it calls on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to provide community guidance and resources on how and when schools and businesses can safely open and when they need to shut down. To create the evidence to inform such guidance requires a substantia­l, coordinate­d increase in the relevant public health research.

COVID- 19 isn’t going to be eradicated anytime soon. In the meantime, hundreds of thousands more lives may be lost. We need stronger political and public health leadership, and a refocused research agenda, to help us learn our way out of the pandemic and prepare for the next one.

To establish the most effective practices for preventing the transmissi­on of COVID- 19, we need more research, including randomized trials.

Steven Woloshin is a professor of medicine at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, and director of the Lisa Schwartz Foundation for Truth in Medicine. Paul Glasziou is a professor of evidence- based medicine and director of the Institute for Evidence Based Healthcare, Bond University, Australia. Susan Michie is a professor of health psychology and director of the Center for Behavior Change, University College London. Glasziou and Michie are among the founders of the BESSI collaborat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States