School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Universitaetsstrasse 25, 33615, Bielefeld, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Oct 14;21(1):1857. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-11923-1.
Handwashing with soap is a cost-effective, efficient health behavior to prevent various diseases. Despite its immense health benefits, the lowest prevalence of handwashing is found in low-income countries. Here, its practice is not only determined by individual behavior, but also heavily shaped by deprivations in the social and structural ecology. Moreover, handwashing barriers are not equally experienced as overlapping social identities (e.g., age and gender) intersect and create inequities between members of different social groups. To embrace the complexities of handwashing beyond individual-level behavior and singular social identities, a combined socioecological and intersectional perspective is employed. This multi-level approach with regards to intersecting privileges and disadvantages serves as a basis to promote this highly important health behavior.
This study used a qualitative, theory-based approach and combined data from two samples: experts in health promotion (n = 22) and local citizens stratified by gender and rural/urban location (n = 56). Data was collected in face-to-face interviews in Sierra Leone between November 2018 and January 2019 and analyzed using thematic analysis and typology of the qualitative data.
The conceptualization of multi-level determinants of handwashing within a socioecological model showed the high relevance of inhibiting social and structural factors for handwashing practice. By establishing seven distinguishing social identity dimensions, data demonstrates that individuals within the same social setting yet with distinct social identities experience strikingly differing degrees of power and privileges to enact handwashing. While a local leader is influential and may also change structural-level determinants, a young, rural wife experiences multiple social and structural constraints to perform handwashing with soap, even if she has high handwashing intentions.
This study provides a holistic analytical framework for the identification of determinants on multiple levels and accumulating intersections of socially produced inequalities for handwashing and is applicable to other health topics. As the exploration of handwashing was approached from a solution-focused instead of a problem-focused perspective, the analysis can guide multi-level intervention approaches (e.g., using low-cost, participatory activities at the community level to make use of the available social capital).
用肥皂洗手是一种具有成本效益且高效的健康行为,可以预防各种疾病。尽管它具有巨大的健康益处,但在低收入国家,洗手的普及率最低。在这里,洗手的实践不仅取决于个人行为,还受到社会和结构生态中各种匮乏的严重影响。此外,由于重叠的社会身份(例如年龄和性别)相互交叉,并在不同社会群体成员之间造成不平等,洗手障碍并非均匀地被体验到。为了超越个人行为和单一社会身份,采用综合社会生态和交叉视角来理解洗手的复杂性。这种关于交叉特权和劣势的多层次方法为促进这种非常重要的健康行为提供了基础。
本研究采用定性、基于理论的方法,结合了两个样本的数据:健康促进专家(n=22)和按性别和城乡位置分层的当地公民(n=56)。数据于 2018 年 11 月至 2019 年 1 月在塞拉利昂进行面对面访谈收集,并使用主题分析和定性数据类型学进行分析。
在社会生态学模型中,对手卫生多层面决定因素的概念化表明,抑制社会和结构因素对手卫生实践具有高度相关性。通过建立七个有区别的社会身份维度,数据表明,处于同一社会环境但具有不同社会身份的个体,在实施手卫生方面经历着截然不同的权力和特权程度。虽然地方领导人有影响力,也可能改变结构层面的决定因素,但一个年轻的农村妻子在实施用肥皂洗手方面会受到多种社会和结构限制,即使她有很高的洗手意愿。
本研究为识别多个层面的决定因素以及对用肥皂洗手的社会产生的不平等的累积交叉点提供了一个全面的分析框架,适用于其他健康主题。由于对手卫生的探索是从以解决方案为导向而不是以问题为导向的角度进行的,因此该分析可以指导多层次的干预方法(例如,在社区层面使用低成本、参与性活动,利用现有的社会资本)。