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促进洗手预防腹泻。

Hand-washing promotion for preventing diarrhoea.

机构信息

Department of Public Health, College of Medical Sciences, University of Calabar, Calabar, Nigeria.

Division of Health Promotion Sciences, University of Arizona, Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, Tucson, Arizona, USA.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Jan 6;12(1):CD004265. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004265.pub4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Diarrhoea accounts for 1.8 million deaths in children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). One of the identified strategies to prevent diarrhoea is hand washing.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the effects of hand-washing promotion interventions on diarrhoeal episodes in children and adults.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, nine other databases, the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trial Registry Platform (ICTRP), and metaRegister of Controlled Trials (mRCT) on 8 January 2020, together with reference checking, citation searching and contact with study authors to identify additional studies.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Individually-randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and cluster-RCTs that compared the effects of hand-washing interventions on diarrhoea episodes in children and adults with no intervention.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Three review authors independently assessed trial eligibility, extracted data, and assessed risks of bias. We stratified the analyses for child day-care centres or schools, community, and hospital-based settings. Where appropriate, we pooled incidence rate ratios (IRRs) using the generic inverse variance method and a random-effects model with a 95% confidence interval (CI). We used the GRADE approach to assess the certainty of the evidence.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 29 RCTs: 13 trials from child day-care centres or schools in mainly high-income countries (54,471 participants), 15 community-based trials in LMICs (29,347 participants), and one hospital-based trial among people with AIDS in a high-income country (148 participants). All the trials and follow-up assessments were of short-term duration. Hand-washing promotion (education activities, sometimes with provision of soap) at child day-care facilities or schools prevent around one-third of diarrhoea episodes in high-income countries (incidence rate ratio (IRR) 0.70, 95% CI 0.58 to 0.85; 9 trials, 4664 participants, high-certainty evidence) and may prevent a similar proportion in LMICs, but only two trials from urban Egypt and Kenya have evaluated this (IRR 0.66, 95% CI 0.43 to 0.99; 2 trials, 45,380 participants; low-certainty evidence). Only four trials reported measures of behaviour change, and the methods of data collection were susceptible to bias. In one trial from the USA hand-washing behaviour was reported to improve; and in the trial from Kenya that provided free soap, hand washing did not increase, but soap use did (data not pooled; 3 trials, 1845 participants; low-certainty evidence). Hand-washing promotion among communities in LMICs probably prevents around one-quarter of diarrhoea episodes (IRR 0.71, 95% CI 0.62 to 0.81; 9 trials, 15,950 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). However, six of these nine trials were from Asian settings, with only one trial from South America and two trials from sub-Saharan Africa. In seven trials, soap was provided free alongside hand-washing education, and the overall average effect size was larger than in the two trials which did not provide soap (soap provided: RR 0.66, 95% CI 0.58 to 0.75; 7 trials, 12,646 participants; education only: RR 0.84, 95% CI 0.67 to 1.05; 2 trials, 3304 participants). There was increased hand washing at major prompts (before eating or cooking, after visiting the toilet, or cleaning the baby's bottom) and increased compliance with hand-hygiene procedure (behavioural outcome) in the intervention groups compared with the control in community trials (data not pooled: 4 trials, 3591 participants; high-certainty evidence). Hand-washing promotion for the one trial conducted in a hospital among a high-risk population showed significant reduction in mean episodes of diarrhoea (1.68 fewer) in the intervention group (mean difference -1.68, 95% CI -1.93 to -1.43; 1 trial, 148 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). Hand-washing frequency increased to seven times a day in the intervention group versus three times a day in the control arm in this hospital trial (1 trial, 148 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). We found no trials evaluating the effects of hand-washing promotions on diarrhoea-related deaths or cost effectiveness.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Hand-washing promotion probably reduces diarrhoea episodes in both child day-care centres in high-income countries and among communities living in LMICs by about 30%. The included trials do not provide evidence about the long-term impact of the interventions.

摘要

背景

在中低收入国家(LMICs),腹泻导致 180 万儿童死亡。预防腹泻的一种已确定策略是洗手。

目的

评估手卫生促进干预措施对儿童和成人腹泻发作的影响。

检索方法

我们于 2020 年 1 月 8 日在 CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase、其他 9 个数据库、世界卫生组织(WHO)国际临床试验注册平台(ICTRP)和对照试验注册中心(mRCT)进行了检索,同时进行了参考文献检查、引文搜索和与研究作者联系以确定其他研究。

选择标准

比较手卫生干预对无干预的儿童和成人腹泻发作影响的个体随机对照试验(RCTs)和群组 RCTs。

数据收集和分析

三位综述作者独立评估了试验的合格性、提取数据并评估了偏倚风险。我们根据儿童日托中心或学校、社区和医院为基础的环境进行了分层分析。在适当的情况下,我们使用通用逆方差法和随机效应模型(95%置信区间[CI])汇总发病率比值(IRRs)。我们使用 GRADE 方法评估证据的确定性。

主要结果

我们纳入了 29 项 RCTs:13 项来自高收入国家的儿童日托中心或学校(54471 名参与者),15 项来自中低收入国家的社区为基础的试验(29347 名参与者),以及一项来自高收入国家艾滋病患者的医院为基础的试验(148 名参与者)。所有试验和随访评估均为短期进行。在高收入国家的儿童日托机构或学校开展手卫生促进(教育活动,有时提供肥皂)可预防约三分之一的腹泻发作(发病率比值[IRR]0.70,95%CI 0.58 至 0.85;9 项试验,4664 名参与者,高确定性证据),在中低收入国家可能也有类似的预防效果,但只有两项来自埃及和肯尼亚的城市地区的试验评估了这一点(IRR 0.66,95%CI 0.43 至 0.99;2 项试验,45380 名参与者,低确定性证据)。只有四项试验报告了行为改变的措施,而且数据收集的方法易受偏倚影响。在来自美国的一项试验中,洗手行为据报告有所改善;而在肯尼亚的一项提供免费肥皂的试验中,洗手并没有增加,但肥皂的使用有所增加(数据未汇总;3 项试验,1845 名参与者,低确定性证据)。在中低收入国家的社区中开展手卫生促进活动可能预防约四分之一的腹泻发作(发病率比值[IRR]0.71,95%CI 0.62 至 0.81;9 项试验,15950 名参与者,中确定性证据)。然而,这 9 项试验中有 6 项来自亚洲,只有 1 项来自南美洲,2 项来自撒哈拉以南非洲。在 7 项试验中,免费提供肥皂和手卫生教育,总体平均效果大小大于没有提供肥皂的两项试验(提供肥皂:RR 0.66,95%CI 0.58 至 0.75;7 项试验,12646 名参与者;仅提供教育:RR 0.84,95%CI 0.67 至 1.05;2 项试验,3304 名参与者)。在社区试验中,主要提示时(进食或烹饪前、上厕所后或清洁婴儿臀部后)的洗手频率增加,且手卫生程序的依从性增加(行为结局)(未汇总数据:4 项试验,3591 名参与者,高确定性证据)。在高危人群中进行的一项医院试验中,手卫生促进显著减少了腹泻发作的平均次数(干预组少 1.68 次)(平均差异-1.68,95%CI-1.93 至-1.43;1 项试验,148 名参与者,中确定性证据)。在这项医院试验中,干预组每天洗手 7 次,而对照组每天洗手 3 次(1 项试验,148 名参与者,中确定性证据)。我们没有发现评估手卫生促进对腹泻相关死亡或成本效益的影响的试验。

结论

手卫生促进措施可能使高收入国家的儿童日托中心和中低收入国家社区中的腹泻发作减少约 30%。纳入的试验没有提供干预措施长期影响的证据。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/668b/8094449/6a4662771fde/nCD004265-FIG-01.jpg

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