School of Geography, Development and Environment, University of Arizona, United States.
Department of Social Sciences, California Polytechnic State University - San Luis Obispo, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2022 Sep;308:115191. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115191. Epub 2022 Jul 6.
Host to one billion people around the world, informal settlements are especially vulnerable to COVID-19 lockdown measures as they already lack basic services such as water, toilets, and secure housing. Additionally, many residents work in informal labor markets that have been affected by the lockdowns, resulting in further reductions in access to resources, including clean water. This study uses a cross-sectional design (n = 532) to examine the vulnerabilities of households to employment and business disruptions, water access and hygiene practices during the COVID-19 lockdowns between April and June 2020 in three informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya. We used survey questions from the Household Water Insecurity Experience Scale (HWISE) to investigate the relationship between employment and business disruptions, water access, and hygiene practices (i.e., hand washing, body washing, clothes washing, and being able to use or drink clean water). Of the sampled households, 96% were forced to reduce work hours during the lockdowns, and these households had 92% lower odds of being able to afford water than households who did not experience a work hour reduction (OR = 0.08, p < .001). Household challenges in affording water were likely due to a combination of reduced household income, increased water prices, and pre-existing poverty, and were ultimately associated with lower hygiene scores (Beta = 1.9, p < .001). Our results highlight a compounding tragedy of reduced water access in informal settlements that were already facing water insecurities at a time when water is a fundamental requirement for following hygiene guidelines to reduce disease burden during an ongoing pandemic. These outcomes emphasize the need for targeted investments in permanent water supply infrastructures and improved hygiene behaviors as a public health priority among households in informal settlements.
全球有 10 亿人居住在非正式住区,这些住区由于缺乏水、厕所和安全住房等基本服务,因此特别容易受到 COVID-19 封锁措施的影响。此外,许多居民在受封锁影响的非正式劳动力市场工作,导致获得资源的机会进一步减少,包括清洁水。本研究使用横断面设计(n=532),于 2020 年 4 月至 6 月期间,在肯尼亚内罗毕的三个非正式住区,调查 COVID-19 封锁期间家庭在就业和商业中断、获得水和卫生习惯方面的脆弱性。我们使用来自家庭水不安全经验量表(HWISE)的调查问题,调查就业和商业中断、获得水和卫生习惯(即洗手、洗澡、洗衣服和能够使用或饮用清洁水)之间的关系。在所抽取的家庭中,96%的家庭在封锁期间被迫减少工作时间,这些家庭能够负担得起水的可能性比没有减少工作时间的家庭低 92%(OR=0.08,p<0.001)。家庭在负担得起水方面的挑战可能是由于家庭收入减少、水费上涨和先前存在的贫困等多种原因造成的,最终与较低的卫生评分相关(β=1.9,p<0.001)。我们的研究结果突显了非正式住区在已经面临水不安全的情况下,水获取减少的悲剧性,而在当前大流行期间,水是遵循卫生指南以减轻疾病负担的基本要求。这些结果强调了需要针对非正式住区家庭进行永久性供水基础设施投资和改善卫生行为,作为公共卫生的优先事项。