Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases, and Epidemic Intelligence Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333, USA.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2012 May;86(5):860-5. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.2012.11-0259.
Access to safe drinking water and improved hygiene are essential for preventing diarrheal diseases. To integrate hygiene improvement with antenatal care, free hygiene kits (water storage containers, water treatment solution, soap) and educational messages were distributed to pregnant women at antenatal clinics in Malawi. We assessed water treatment and hygiene practices of 275 non-pregnant friends and relatives of the hygiene kit recipients at baseline and follow-up nine months later to measure program impact on non-participants in the same communities. At follow-up, friends and relatives who did not receive kits or education were more likely than at baseline to purchase and use water treatment solution (25% versus 1%; P < 0.0001) and demonstrate correct handwashing practices (60% versus 18%; P < 0.0001). This antenatal clinic-based program resulted in improved water treatment and hygiene behaviors among non-pregnant friends and relatives living in the same communities as hygiene kit recipients, suggesting that program benefits extended beyond direct beneficiaries.
获得安全饮用水和改善卫生条件对于预防腹泻病至关重要。为了将卫生改善与产前护理相结合,马拉维的产前诊所向孕妇免费发放了卫生包(储水容器、水处理剂、肥皂)和教育信息。我们在基线和九个月后的随访中评估了 275 名未怀孕的卫生包接受者的亲友的水处理和卫生习惯,以衡量该方案对同一社区非参与者的影响。在随访中,与基线相比,未接受 kits 或教育的亲友更有可能购买和使用水处理剂(25%比 1%;P < 0.0001)并展示正确的洗手习惯(60%比 18%;P < 0.0001)。这项基于产前诊所的方案改善了卫生包接受者所在社区中未怀孕的亲友的水处理和卫生行为,表明该方案的效益超出了直接受益人群。