Bailie Ross S, Stevens Matthew R, McDonald Elizabeth, Halpin Stephen, Brewster David, Robinson Gary, Guthridge Stephen
Menzies School of Health Research and Institute of Advanced Studies, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2005 Dec 8;5:128. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-5-128.
Poor housing conditions in remote Indigenous communities in Australia are a major underlying factor in poor child health, including high rates of skin infections. The aim of this study is to test approaches to data collection, analysis and feedback for a follow-up study of the impact of housing conditions on child health.
Participation was negotiated in three communities with community councils and individual participants. Data were collected by survey of dwelling condition, interviews, and audit health centre records of children aged under seven years. Community feedback comprised immediate report of items requiring urgent repair followed by a summary descriptive report. Multivariate models were developed to calculate adjusted incidence rate ratios (IRR) for skin infections and their association with aspects of household infrastructure.
There was a high level of participation in all communities. Health centre records were inadequate for audit in one community. The records of 138 children were available for development of multivariate analytic models. Rates of skin infection in dwellings that lacked functioning facilities for removing faeces or which had concrete floors may be up to twice as high as for other dwellings, and the latter association appears to be exacerbated by crowding. Younger children living in older dwellings may also be at approximately two-fold higher risk. A number of socioeconomic and socio-demographic variables also appear to be directly associated with high rates of skin infections.
The methods used in the pilot study were generally feasible, and the analytic approach provides meaningful results. The study provides some evidence that new and modern housing is contributing to a reduction in skin infections in Aboriginal children in remote communities, particularly when this housing leads to a reduction in crowding and the effective removal of human waste.
澳大利亚偏远原住民社区恶劣的住房条件是儿童健康状况不佳的一个主要潜在因素,包括皮肤感染率高。本研究的目的是测试数据收集、分析和反馈方法,以便对住房条件对儿童健康的影响进行后续研究。
与三个社区的社区委员会和个体参与者协商参与事宜。通过对居住条件进行调查、开展访谈以及查阅七岁以下儿童的健康中心记录来收集数据。社区反馈包括对需要紧急维修项目的即时报告,随后是一份描述性总结报告。构建多变量模型以计算皮肤感染的调整发病率比(IRR)及其与家庭基础设施各方面的关联。
所有社区的参与度都很高。在一个社区,健康中心记录不足以用于审核。有138名儿童的记录可用于构建多变量分析模型。缺乏粪便处理设施或混凝土地面的住所中皮肤感染率可能高达其他住所的两倍,并且后者的关联似乎因拥挤而加剧。居住在老旧住所中的年幼儿童感染风险可能也高出约两倍。一些社会经济和社会人口统计学变量似乎也与皮肤感染的高发病率直接相关。
试点研究中使用的方法总体上是可行的,并且分析方法提供了有意义的结果。该研究提供了一些证据表明,新建和现代化住房有助于减少偏远社区原住民儿童的皮肤感染,特别是当这种住房减少了拥挤并有效处理了人类排泄物时。