Asymptomatic testing compared with standard care of the care home staff in shaping care home COVID-19 testing policy: the VIVALDI-CT pragmatic cluster RCT (VIVALDI-CT)

Adams N, Stirrup O, Blackstone J, Krutikov M, Cassell J, Cadar D, Henderson C, Knapp M, Goscé L, O'Brien L, Leiser R, Regan M, Cullen-Stephenson I, Fenner R, Verma A, Gordon AL, Hopkins S, Copas A, Freemantle N, Flowers P, Shallcross L
Record ID 32018014998
English
Authors' objectives: Regular severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 testing of care home staff was introduced to reduce transmission following significant morbidity, mortality and disruption for residents early in the pandemic. However, evidence was lacking on benefits relative to disadvantages. The VIVALDI-Clinical Trial aimed to investigate whether regular asymptomatic staff testing for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, alongside funding for sick pay and agency backfill, was feasible and effective in reducing severe coronavirus disease discovered in 2019-related outcomes in residents.
Authors' results and conclusions: The trial stopped early for futility due to site recruitment and primary outcome incidence being lower than expected. There was no significant difference in resident coronavirus disease discovered in 2019-linked hospital admission incidence between intervention and control arms (incidence rate ratio 1.19, 95% confidence interval 0.55 to 2.58; p = 0.66). The process evaluation found that changing epidemiology, policy and social norms around coronavirus disease discovered in 2019 shaped the uptake and maintenance of testing. Interviews with care home managers suggested most homes no longer test staff, even when symptomatic, and do not pay for sickness absence outside of statutory sick pay. Modelling concluded that regular staff testing, when combined with non-pharmaceutical interventions preventing transmission among residents, is an effective strategy to reduce cases and deaths among care home residents that could also lead to significant cost savings. There was lower-than-expected quality of life for 43 residents from 9 care homes without outbreak and 1 home with recent coronavirus disease discovered in 2019 outbreak, with older residents experiencing greater benefits from social care support. Contextual changes undermined our ability to evaluate the intervention’s impact. However, trial set-up was achieved in
Authors' methods: VIVALDI-Clinical Trial comprised five interlinking work packages. A cluster randomised controlled trial was conducted from January to August 2023. The ‘Test to Care’ intervention was coproduced with the care sector. Eighty-one residential/nursing homes in England providing care to adults aged ≥ 65 years. Forty-one homes were randomised to intervention and 40 to control. Care homes were randomised 1 : 1 to intervention (twice weekly staff testing, staff sick pay and agency backfill) or control arm (national testing guidance at time of trial). Health data from routine national data sets were used alongside aggregate data from participating homes. Health economic and modelling analyses evaluated costs and cost-effectiveness of staff testing. Interviews with care home managers explored post-pandemic policies on staff testing, sickness pay and absence. A process evaluation was conducted to understand intervention roll-out. A mixed-study design investigated the impact of coronavirus disease discovered in 2019 outbreaks on care home residents’ quality of life. Stakeholder engagement was undertaken to enable the sector to coproduce recommendations for policy-makers. Intervention acceptability was initially high, but waned because of the changing epidemiological, policy and social context.
Details
Project Status: Completed
Year Published: 2026
URL for additional information: English
English language abstract: An English language summary is available
Publication Type: Full HTA
Country: England, United Kingdom
MeSH Terms
  • COVID-19
  • COVID-19 Testing
  • SARS-CoV-2
  • Nursing Homes
  • Homes for the Aged
  • Assisted Living Facilities
  • Asymptomatic Infections
  • Caregivers
  • Nursing Staff
  • Allied Health Personnel
  • Health Personnel
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
Contact
Organisation Name: NIHR Health Services and Delivery Research programme
Contact Address: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health and Care Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK
Contact Name: journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
Contact Email: journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
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