A Qualitative Evaluation of the Barriers and Enablers for Implementation of an Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Testing Service at the University of Nottingham: A Multi-Site Higher Education Setting in England
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Social Responsibility and Innovation
3.1.1. Sub-Theme 1: Positive Impact on Community
“…whenever we started the testing site momentum, that had a very strong and positive impact on the community …by us taking the testing out to the community area and being visible it showed how serious we took the pandemic itself …just being more visible was pretty big.”(Respondent 5)
3.1.2. Sub-Theme 2: Impact on Safety and Wellbeing
“…having these sorts of testing things would mean that if they were in, they knew that most of the people there were being tested and were therefore safe…I think it was incredibly reassuring.”(Respondent 12)
“They were incredibly grateful for it because a number of members of staff had ‘at risk’ partners for health reasons to covid so to know that they could test regularly and know that they were not going to put their partner or family member at risk was a huge benefit for them.”(Respondent 15)
“…they’ve been getting tested to make sure that they, they keep their, their partner safe and therefore they, the, the wider population safe as well.”(Respondent 8)
“…Staff would have been more worried because the isolating for 10 days would have meant losing 10 days of work, or potentially bringing COVID to their family, kids etc and I think, if anything it was the value of the service was appreciated more by staff in my opinion for these reasons.”(Respondent 3)
3.2. Theme 2: When, How and Why People Accessed the Testing
3.2.1. Sub-Theme: Barriers and Enablers of Testing Uptake
“…the sheer demand of the test at peak times like end of terms or before holidays, like Christmas, they were very popular times for the test, people heavily relied on the test to feel safe, to go home to their family …”(Respondent 3)
“we always saw an uptake in the number of students who were testing when, when it was incentivised.”(Respondent 24)
“… it’s a great window into human psyche that offering a relatively small treat as it were, gave people a positive reason to, uh, to, to want to donate a, a saliva sample rather than just being told that they had to…”(Respondent 8)
“…they just simply didn’t like the swab testing…the ability to just basically dribble into a tube and then pop that in a bag and leave it somewhere for somebody to collect and then report back whether you’re positive or not positive…seemed very beneficial.”(Respondent 8)
“…the students were so worried that they would test positive, and then the whole floor [of the residence] would need to isolate…human nature was different to what we predicted.”(Respondent 13)
“… we extended our provision to cover primary school age children of staff to help them when the schools were requiring regular test …I do believe that the staff really value the service that we provide.”(Respondent 16)
“…the easing of … the rules to a way that negatively impacts on the people’s desire to test.”(Respondent 7)
“…when the national regulations were eased off and pretty much scrapped it meant we got less people testing… our sample numbers fell through the floor…government guidelines definitely hindered the sort of, the input and output of the service.”(Respondent 10)
3.2.2. Return to Normality
“…that thing with the NHS, which was the alternative…you could order lateral flows, or you could ask for PCR [polymerase chain reaction], but the PCR you were supposed to have symptoms to get it but with our PCR test, they could be testing daily, even without having the symptoms so they could catch the infection extremely early on.”(Respondent 2)
3.3. Impact of the Service on the Spread of COVID-19
3.3.1. Identifying and Containing Outbreaks
“I think we ended up just chasing outbreaks rather than preventing them, which was fine because we just identified lots of problems, but we didn’t know what to do with the outbreaks once they were there other than to say isolate but because the government guidance changed so much, you know Halls are not a household, household isn’t a massive building so how you know, it’s almost like we needed some clearer guidance on what to tell students once they were positive.”(Respondent 1)
“…if testing was mandated, it would be a more effective service, and a large amount of time and thought was given to how we engage with students, where it’s an optional process.”(Respondent 24)
“I don’t think it was helpful in stopping spread, because of, the inability of the university to make it a requirement…I was met with, well, they can’t mandate testing…”(Respondent 21)
3.3.2. Relationship with Social Behaviours
“I think the people who were going to follow the rules and social distance and wash their hands …they would have done so even if the Testing Service wasn’t in place, but it might have been a good reminder.”(Respondent 21)
“…people went to the either extreme…you would have people who were like ‘I am negative, so give me a hug, so it’s fine, we will share a drink’ or whatever and then you had other people who were the opposite who said ‘I’m negative, I don’t’ want to get it, so don’t go near me.’ But it forced people into two very extreme views and behaviours, I think. I don’t think anyone was really in the middle by the end.”(Respondent 1)
3.4. Lessons Learned for the Future
3.4.1. Service Offer
“…but I guess that what the service is a testing service, you know if it wanted to also, it could have extended to isolation service and wellbeing, but we gave that back to the Uni to do really. It was like at the end of our remit, erm, which you know, was hard because we were the ones telling people, and ‘cause it was a telephone call, it wasn’t just an email, that you didn’t know these people, you got to hear their voices, got to hear how they reacted, it was quite hard, because you want to do more…”(Respondent 1)
“…I was pushing in those early days that we had opened up the testing service much more quickly to, to staff members … better integration of, of the students and the staff early on, and then expanding it out more rapidly to the, the family members.”(Respondent 8)
3.4.2. Service Delivery
“…a bit of a regret there that we weren’t able to get better engagement with the government departments to roll out what arguably is a simpler and an easier test.”(Respondent 8)
3.4.3. Ways of Working
“…throw money and give us roots to get problems solved without a huge amount of red tape…we can just operate to get something done...having a hotline to the people that can actually make decisions that the university will follow was particularly welcome.”(Respondent 12)
4. Discussion
4.1. Theme 1: Social Responsibility and Innovation
4.2. Themes 2 and 3: Testing Uptake and Service Impact on the Spread of COVID-19
4.3. Theme 4: Lessons Learned for the Future
4.4. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Blake, H.; Somerset, S.; Mahmood, I.; Mahmood, N.; Corner, J.; Ball, J.K.; Denning, C. A Qualitative Evaluation of the Barriers and Enablers for Implementation of an Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Testing Service at the University of Nottingham: A Multi-Site Higher Education Setting in England. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 13140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013140
Blake H, Somerset S, Mahmood I, Mahmood N, Corner J, Ball JK, Denning C. A Qualitative Evaluation of the Barriers and Enablers for Implementation of an Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Testing Service at the University of Nottingham: A Multi-Site Higher Education Setting in England. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(20):13140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013140
Chicago/Turabian StyleBlake, Holly, Sarah Somerset, Ikra Mahmood, Neelam Mahmood, Jessica Corner, Jonathan K. Ball, and Chris Denning. 2022. "A Qualitative Evaluation of the Barriers and Enablers for Implementation of an Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Testing Service at the University of Nottingham: A Multi-Site Higher Education Setting in England" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 20: 13140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013140
APA StyleBlake, H., Somerset, S., Mahmood, I., Mahmood, N., Corner, J., Ball, J. K., & Denning, C. (2022). A Qualitative Evaluation of the Barriers and Enablers for Implementation of an Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Testing Service at the University of Nottingham: A Multi-Site Higher Education Setting in England. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(20), 13140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013140