Department for Disease Control, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, England, United Kingdom.
Humanitarian Department, Save the Children, London, England, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2020 Feb 3;15(2):e0228482. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228482. eCollection 2020.
Children in humanitarian situations are particularly vulnerable to diseases such as diarrhoea. Handwashing with soap can greatly reduce transmission but handwashing rates are often low and traditional interventions ineffective. To aid future intervention design, this study aims to understand the determinants of child handwashing and the key motivational drivers of children's behaviour within a specific humanitarian setting.
In an internally displaced persons camp in Northern Iraq we conducted a series of 36 friendship-paired interviews with children aged 7-12 years, six semi-structured caregiver interviews, and three semi-structured hygiene promoter interviews. Perceived determinants of child handwashing were explored qualitatively, and motivational drivers were explored quantitatively with children in a rating exercise. Qualitative data were analysed thematically, using an inductive approach, and logistic regression analyses of motive rating data were performed to determine the predicted probabilities of motives being rated as important.
Access to soap and water was perceived to be high across all participant groups. Children, caregivers and hygiene promoters all perceive the determinants of child handwashing to be associated with familial role, environmental factors pertaining to location and quality of handwashing materials and facilities, and level of exposure to hygiene promotion, and children also attribute their handwashing to social norms. We find that children in this context are motived most by play and nurture.
Provision of soap and water alone is not sufficient to encourage children to practice handwashing with soap in a humanitarian context. Our findings suggest that equal consideration should be given to the quality and location of handwashing materials and facilities and social norms could be leveraged to promote and enhance child handwashing. Motive-based interventions targeting play or nurture may be a promising approach and are likely most effective when used in conjunction, along with other motivational drivers such as affiliation and love.
人道主义环境中的儿童特别容易感染腹泻等疾病。用肥皂洗手可以大大降低疾病传播的风险,但洗手的频率往往很低,传统的干预措施也不起作用。为了帮助未来的干预措施设计,本研究旨在了解儿童洗手的决定因素以及特定人道主义环境中儿童行为的关键动机驱动因素。
在伊拉克北部的一个境内流离失所者营地,我们对 7-12 岁的儿童进行了一系列 36 次友谊配对访谈、六次半结构化照顾者访谈和三次半结构化卫生促进者访谈。定性探讨了儿童洗手的感知决定因素,并通过儿童评分练习探讨了动机驱动因素。使用归纳法对定性数据进行主题分析,并对动机评分数据进行逻辑回归分析,以确定动机被评为重要的预测概率。
所有参与者群体都认为获得肥皂和水的机会很高。儿童、照顾者和卫生促进者都认为儿童洗手的决定因素与家庭角色、与洗手材料和设施的位置和质量有关的环境因素、接触卫生促进的程度有关,儿童还将其洗手归因于社会规范。我们发现,在这种情况下,儿童最受游戏和养育的激励。
仅提供肥皂和水不足以鼓励人道主义环境中的儿童用肥皂洗手。我们的研究结果表明,应平等考虑洗手材料和设施的质量和位置,并且可以利用社会规范来促进和增强儿童洗手。针对游戏或养育的基于动机的干预措施可能是一种有前途的方法,并且当与其他动机驱动因素(如附属和爱)一起使用时,可能最有效。