Department for Disease Control, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel St, Bloomsbury, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
Department for Disease Control, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel St, Bloomsbury, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2019 Mar;222(2):177-182. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.09.002. Epub 2018 Sep 13.
In humanitarian emergency settings there is need for low cost and rapidly deployable interventions to protect vulnerable children, in- and out-of-school, from diarrhoeal diseases. Handwashing with soap can greatly reduce diarrhoea but interventions specifically targeting children's handwashing behaviour in humanitarian settings have not been tested. Traditional children's handwashing promotion interventions have been school-focused, resource-intensive and reliant on health-based messaging. However, recent research from non-humanitarian settings and targeting adults suggests that theory-based behaviour change interventions targeting specific motives may be more effective than traditional handwashing interventions. In this proof-of-concept study we test, for the first time, the distribution of a modified soap bar, designed to appeal to the motives of play and curiosity, in a household-level, rapidly deployable, handwashing promotion intervention for older children in a humanitarian setting - an internally displaced persons camp in Iraqi Kurdistan. Out of five total blocks within the camp, one was assigned to intervention and one to control. 40 households from each assigned block were then randomly chosen for inclusion in the study and the practice of handwashing with soap at key times was measured at baseline and four weeks after intervention delivery. Children in intervention households received transparent soaps with embedded toys, delivered within a short, fun, and interactive household session with minimal, non-health-based, messaging. The control group received plain soap delivered in a short standard, health-based, hygiene promotion session. At the 4-week follow-up, children in the intervention group were 4 times more likely to wash their hands with soap after key handwashing occasions than expected in the counterfactual (if there had been no intervention) based on the comparison to children in the control group (adjusted RR = 3.94, 95% CI 1.59-9.79). We show that distributing soaps with toys embedded inside, in a rapidly deployable intervention, can improve child handwashing behaviour in a humanitarian emergency context. Further studies are needed to determine the longer-term behavioural and health impact of such an intervention when delivered at a greater scale in a humanitarian context.
在人道主义紧急情况下,需要低成本且可快速部署的干预措施来保护校内外的弱势儿童免受腹泻病的侵害。用肥皂洗手可以大大减少腹泻,但针对人道主义环境中儿童洗手行为的干预措施尚未经过测试。传统的儿童洗手促进干预措施一直以学校为重点,资源密集型且依赖于基于健康的信息传递。然而,最近来自非人道主义环境且针对成年人的研究表明,针对特定动机的基于理论的行为改变干预措施可能比传统的洗手干预措施更有效。在这项概念验证研究中,我们首次测试了在人道主义环境中针对年龄较大的儿童在家庭层面上快速部署的洗手促进干预措施中分配经过改良的肥皂,这种肥皂是为了吸引玩耍和好奇心等动机而设计的。在营地内的五个总区域中,一个区域被分配给干预组,一个区域被分配给对照组。然后,从每个分配的区域中随机选择 40 户家庭参与研究,并在基线和干预措施实施四周后测量关键时间点的用肥皂洗手情况。干预组家庭的儿童收到了带有嵌入式玩具的透明肥皂,这些肥皂是在一个简短、有趣且互动性强的家庭会议中提供的,会议传递的信息最少且不基于健康。对照组收到了在简短的标准基于健康的卫生促进会议中提供的普通肥皂。在 4 周的随访中,与对照组的儿童相比,干预组的儿童在关键洗手场合后用肥皂洗手的可能性要高出 4 倍(如果没有干预,基于对照组的情况推测,调整后的 RR=3.94,95%CI 1.59-9.79)。我们表明,在快速部署的干预措施中分配内置玩具的肥皂可以改善人道主义紧急情况下儿童的洗手行为。需要进一步的研究来确定在更大规模的人道主义背景下,这种干预措施的长期行为和健康影响。