Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, University of Iowa College of Public Health, IA, United States of America.
Department of Community and Behavioral Health, University of Iowa College of Public Health, IA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 8;13(10):e0205345. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205345. eCollection 2018.
Globally, preterm birth (PTB) and low infant birth weight (LBW) are leading causes of maternal and child morbidity and mortality. Inadequate water and sanitation access (WASH) are risk factors for PTB and LBW in low-income countries. Physical stress from carrying water and psychosocial stress from addressing sanitation needs in the open may be mechanisms underlying these associations. If so, then living in a community with strong social capital should be able to buffer the adverse effects of WASH on birth outcomes. The objective of this study is to assess the relationships between WASH access and social conditions (including harassment and social capital) on PTB and LBW outcomes among Indian women, and to test whether social conditions modified the association between WASH and birth outcomes.
This cohort study examined the effect of pre-birth WASH and social conditions on self-reported PTB status and LBW status for 7,926 women who gave birth between 2004/2005 and 2011/2012 Waves of the India Human Development Survey. PTB and LBW occurred in 14.9% and 15.5% of women, respectively. After adjusting for maternal biological and socioeconomic conditions, PTB was associated with sharing a building/compound latrine (Odds Ratio (OR) = 1.55; 95% Confidence Interval (CI) = 1.01, 2.38) versus private latrine access, but suggested an effect in the opposite direction for sharing a community/public latrine (OR = 0.67; CI = 0.45, 1.01). Open defecation, type of drinking water source, minutes per day spent fetching water, and one-way time to a drinking water source were not associated with PTB. LBW was associated with spending more than two hours per day fetching water compared to less than two hours (OR = 1.33; CI = 1.05, 1.70) and suggested an association with open defecation (OR = 1.22; CI = 1.00, 1.48), but was not associated with other types of sanitation, type of drinking water source, or time to a drinking water source. Harassment of women and girls in the community was associated with both PTB (OR = 1.33; CI = 1.09, 1.62) and LBW (OR = 1.26; CI = 1.03, 1.54). The data also showed a possible association of local crime with LBW (OR = 1.30; CI = 1.00, 1.68). Statistically significant (p<0.05) evidence of effect modification was only found for collective efficacy on the association between type of sanitation access and PTB. In addition, stratified analyses identified differences in effect size for walking time to the primary drinking water source and PTB by crime, sanitation access and PTB by harassment, and total hours per day fetching water and LBW by collective efficacy. Limitations of this observational study include risk of bias, inability to confirm causality, reliance on self-reported outcomes, and limited sub-group sample sizes for testing effect modification.
The relationship between adverse birth outcomes and sanitation access, domestic water fetching, crime, and gender-based harassment suggests physical and psychosocial stress are possible mechanisms by which WASH access affects PTB and LBW among Indian women. Interventions that reduce domestic responsibilities related to water and sanitation and change social norms related to gender-based harassment may reduce rates of PTB and LBW in India.
在全球范围内,早产(PTB)和低出生体重儿(LBW)是导致母婴发病率和死亡率的主要原因。在低收入国家,水和环境卫生设施获取不足(WASH)是 PTB 和 LBW 的风险因素。在户外提水会造成身体压力,解决卫生需求会造成心理压力,这些可能是这些关联的潜在机制。如果是这样的话,那么生活在一个社会资本雄厚的社区应该能够缓冲 WASH 对出生结果的不利影响。本研究的目的是评估 WASH 可及性与社会条件(包括骚扰和社会资本)与印度妇女早产和低出生体重儿结局之间的关系,并检验社会条件是否改变了 WASH 与出生结局之间的关联。
本队列研究调查了出生前 WASH 和社会条件对 7926 名 2004/2005 年至 2011/2012 年印度人类发展调查波次期间分娩的妇女自报早产状况和低出生体重儿状况的影响。早产和低出生体重儿的发生率分别为 14.9%和 15.5%。在调整了产妇的生物和社会经济条件后,与使用私人厕所相比,共享建筑物/院子厕所(优势比(OR)=1.55;95%置信区间(CI)=1.01,2.38)与早产有关,但与使用社区/公共厕所(OR=0.67;CI=0.45,1.01)的关系则相反。开放式排便、饮用水源类型、每天花费在取水上的分钟数以及到饮用水源的单程时间与 PTB 无关。LBW 与每天取水超过两小时相比,每天取水不到两小时(OR=1.33;CI=1.05,1.70)有关,与开放式排便(OR=1.22;CI=1.00,1.48)有关,但与其他类型的卫生设施、饮用水源类型或到达饮用水源的时间无关。社区中对妇女和女孩的骚扰与早产(OR=1.33;CI=1.09,1.62)和低出生体重儿(OR=1.26;CI=1.03,1.54)都有关。数据还显示,当地犯罪与 LBW 之间可能存在关联(OR=1.30;CI=1.00,1.68)。仅发现集体效能对卫生设施类型与 PTB 之间的关联、骚扰对卫生设施类型与 PTB 之间的关联、社区犯罪对取水时间与 PTB 之间的关联、集体效能对每天总取水时间与 LBW 之间的关联有统计学意义(p<0.05)的修饰效应证据。本观察性研究的局限性包括偏倚风险、无法确认因果关系、依赖自我报告的结果以及用于检验修饰效应的亚组样本量有限。
不良出生结局与卫生设施获取、家庭用水获取、犯罪和基于性别的骚扰之间的关系表明,身体和心理压力可能是 WASH 获取影响印度妇女早产和低出生体重儿的潜在机制。减少与水和卫生有关的家庭责任并改变与基于性别的骚扰有关的社会规范的干预措施可能会降低印度的早产和低出生体重儿率。