Akpakli David Etsey, Manyeh Alfred Kwesi, Akpakli Jonas Kofi, Kukula Vida, Gyapong Margaret
Ghana Health Service/Dodowa Health Research Centre, Dodowa, Ghana.
School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
BMC Res Notes. 2018 Jul 13;11(1):473. doi: 10.1186/s13104-018-3572-6.
Access to improved sanitation facilities is critical to the health and well-being of individuals and communities. However, globally, over 2.5 billion people live without access to safe sanitation facilities and more than 40% of the world population, do not use a toilet, but defecate in the open or in unsanitary places. In Ghana, only 14% of the population have access to improved sanitation facilities with great disparities between rural (8%) and urban (19%) dwellers. This paper sought to examine the determinants of access to improved sanitation facilities by households among rural dwellers in two districts in southern Ghana.
This study, which involved 16,353 household heads from the Dodowa Health and Demographic Surveillance System, found that sanitation facilities used by households were significantly influenced by age, gender, level of education, occupation, marital and socioeconomic status of household heads. It further revealed that a large proportion (85.94%) of the study participants did not have access to improved sanitation facilities. The study therefore recommends that the national sanitation laws must strictly be enforced to ensure each household in Ghana has decent and hygienic toilet facility.
获得改善后的卫生设施对于个人和社区的健康与福祉至关重要。然而,在全球范围内,超过25亿人无法使用安全的卫生设施,世界上超过40%的人口不使用厕所,而是在户外或不卫生的地方排便。在加纳,只有14%的人口能够使用改善后的卫生设施,农村(8%)和城市(19%)居民之间存在巨大差距。本文旨在研究加纳南部两个地区农村居民家庭获得改善后的卫生设施的决定因素。
这项研究涉及来自多杜瓦健康与人口监测系统的16353名户主,发现家庭使用的卫生设施受到户主的年龄、性别、教育程度、职业、婚姻状况和社会经济地位的显著影响。研究还进一步表明,很大一部分(85.94%)研究参与者无法使用改善后的卫生设施。因此,该研究建议必须严格执行国家卫生法律,以确保加纳的每个家庭都有体面且卫生的厕所设施。