Mukabutera Assumpta, Thomson Dana, Murray Megan, Basinga Paulin, Nyirazinyoye Laetitia, Atwood Sidney, Savage Kevin P, Ngirimana Aimable, Hedt-Gauthier Bethany L
University of Rwanda School of Public Health, Kigali, Rwanda.
Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2016 Aug 5;16:731. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-3435-9.
Diarrhea among children under 5 years of age has long been a major public health concern. Previous studies have suggested an association between rainfall and diarrhea. Here, we examined the association between Rwandan rainfall patterns and childhood diarrhea and the impact of household sanitation variables on this relationship.
We derived a series of rain-related variables in Rwanda based on daily rainfall measurements and hydrological models built from daily precipitation measurements collected between 2009 and 2011. Using these data and the 2010 Rwanda Demographic and Health Survey database, we measured the association between total monthly rainfall, monthly rainfall intensity, runoff water and anomalous rainfall and the occurrence of diarrhea in children under 5 years of age.
Among the 8601 children under 5 years of age included in the survey, 13.2 % reported having diarrhea within the 2 weeks prior to the survey. We found that higher levels of runoff were protective against diarrhea compared to low levels among children who lived in households with unimproved toilet facilities (OR = 0.54, 95 % CI: [0.34, 0.87] for moderate runoff and OR = 0.50, 95 % CI: [0.29, 0.86] for high runoff) but had no impact among children in household with improved toilets.
Our finding that children in households with unimproved toilets were less likely to report diarrhea during periods of high runoff highlights the vulnerabilities of those living without adequate sanitation to the negative health impacts of environmental events.
5岁以下儿童腹泻长期以来一直是主要的公共卫生问题。以往研究表明降雨与腹泻之间存在关联。在此,我们研究了卢旺达降雨模式与儿童腹泻之间的关联以及家庭卫生变量对这种关系的影响。
我们基于每日降雨量测量数据以及根据2009年至2011年收集的每日降水量构建的水文模型,得出了卢旺达一系列与降雨相关的变量。利用这些数据以及2010年卢旺达人口与健康调查数据库,我们测量了每月总降雨量、月降雨强度、径流水和异常降雨与5岁以下儿童腹泻发生之间的关联。
在调查纳入的8601名5岁以下儿童中,13.2%报告在调查前2周内有腹泻。我们发现,与居住在卫生设施未改善家庭的儿童中低径流水平相比,较高水平的径流对腹泻有预防作用(中等径流时OR = 0.54,95%CI:[0.34, 0.87];高径流时OR = 0.50,95%CI:[0.29, 0.86]),但对卫生设施改善家庭的儿童没有影响。
我们的研究发现,卫生设施未改善家庭的儿童在高径流时期报告腹泻的可能性较小,这凸显了那些缺乏足够卫生设施的人群在面对环境事件对健康的负面影响时的脆弱性。