Hirai Mitsuaki, Roess Amira, Huang Cheng, Graham Jay
Department of Global Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA;
Department of Global Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
Glob Health Action. 2016 Oct 26;9:32833. doi: 10.3402/gha.v9.32833. eCollection 2016.
High-risk water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) practices are still prevalent in most low-income countries. Because of limited access to WASH, children may be put at an increased risk of diarrheal diseases.
This study aims to 1) develop a new measure of WASH-induced burden, the WASH Resource Index (WRI), and estimate its correlation with child diarrhea and an additive index of high-risk WASH practices; 2) explore the geographic distribution of high-risk WASH practices, child diarrhea, and summary indices at the cluster level; and 3) examine the association between the WRI and child diarrhea at the individual level.
A sample of 7,019 children from the Uganda Demographic and Health Survey 2011 were included in this study. Principal component analysis was used to develop a WRI, and households were classified as WASH poorest, poorer, middle, richer, and richest. A hot spot analysis was conducted to assess whether and how high-risk WASH practices and child diarrhea were geographically clustered. A potential association between the WRI and child diarrhea was examined through a nested regression analysis.
High-risk WASH practices were clustered at geographically distant regions from Kampala. The 2-week prevalence of child diarrhea, however, was concentrated in Eastern and East Central regions where high-risk WASH practices were not prevalent. At the individual level, none of the high-risk WASH practices were significantly associated with child diarrhea. Being in the highest WASH quintile was, however, significantly associated with 24.9% lower prevalence of child diarrhea compared to being in the lowest quintile (<0.05).
Only a weak association was found between the WRI and child diarrhea in this study. Future research should explore the potential utility of the WRI to examine WASH-induced burden.
在大多数低收入国家,高风险的水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)行为仍然普遍存在。由于获得WASH服务的机会有限,儿童患腹泻病的风险可能会增加。
本研究旨在1)开发一种新的衡量WASH导致的负担的指标,即WASH资源指数(WRI),并估计其与儿童腹泻以及高风险WASH行为相加指数之间的相关性;2)在聚类层面探索高风险WASH行为、儿童腹泻和汇总指数的地理分布;3)在个体层面检验WRI与儿童腹泻之间的关联。
本研究纳入了2011年乌干达人口与健康调查中的7019名儿童样本。采用主成分分析法开发WRI,并将家庭分为WASH最贫困、较贫困、中等、较富裕和最富裕类别。进行热点分析以评估高风险WASH行为和儿童腹泻是否在地理上聚类以及如何聚类。通过嵌套回归分析检验WRI与儿童腹泻之间的潜在关联。
高风险WASH行为聚集在距离坎帕拉地理位置较远的地区。然而,儿童腹泻的两周患病率集中在东部和东中部地区,而这些地区高风险WASH行为并不普遍。在个体层面,没有一种高风险WASH行为与儿童腹泻显著相关。然而,与处于最低WASH五分位数的儿童相比,处于最高WASH五分位数的儿童腹泻患病率显著降低24.9%(<0.05)。
在本研究中,仅发现WRI与儿童腹泻之间存在微弱关联。未来的研究应探索WRI在检验WASH导致的负担方面的潜在效用。