Division of Environmental Health Sciences, Berkeley School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, USA.
Berkeley School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Sep 4;22(1):1673. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13904-4.
Open defecation due to a lack of access to sanitation facilities remains a public health issue in the United States. People experiencing homelessness face barriers to accessing sanitation facilities, and are often forced to practice open defecation on streets and sidewalks. Exposed feces may contain harmful pathogens posing a significant threat to public health, especially among unhoused persons living near open defecation sites. The City of San Francisco's Department of Public Works implemented the Pit Stop Program to provide the unhoused and the general public with improved access to sanitation with the goal of reducing fecal contamination on streets and sidewalks. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of these public restroom interventions on reports of exposed feces in San Francisco, California.
We evaluated the impact of various public restroom interventions implemented from January 1, 2014 to January 1, 2020 on reports of exposed feces, captured through a 311 municipal service. Publicly available 311 reports of exposed feces were spatially and temporally matched to 31 Pit Stop restroom interventions at 27 locations across 10 San Francisco neighborhoods. We conducted an interrupted time-series analysis to compare pre- versus post-intervention rates of feces reports near the restrooms.
Feces reports declined by 12.47 reports per week after the installation of 13 Pit Stop restrooms (p-value = 0.0002). In the same restrooms, the rate of reports per week declined from the six-month pre-intervention period to the post-intervention period (slope change = -0.024 [95% CI = -0.033, -0.014]). In a subset of restrooms, where new installations were made (Mission and Golden Gate Park), and in another subset of restrooms where restroom attendants were provided (Mission, Castro/Upper Market, and Financial District/South Beach), feces reports also declined.
Increased access to public toilets reduced feces reports in San Francisco, especially in neighborhoods with people experiencing homelessness. The addition of restroom attendants also appeared to have reduced feces reports in some neighborhoods with PEH. These interventions should be audited for implementation quality, observed utilization data, and user experience at the neighborhood level in order to tailor sanitation interventions to neighborhood-specific needs.
由于缺乏卫生设施,在美国,露天排便仍然是一个公共卫生问题。无家可归者在获得卫生设施方面面临障碍,他们经常被迫在街上和人行道上露天排便。暴露的粪便可能含有有害病原体,对公共健康构成重大威胁,尤其是在住在露天排便地点附近的无家可归者中。旧金山公共工程部实施了“坑点站计划”(Pit Stop Program),为无家可归者和公众提供更好的卫生设施,目标是减少街道和人行道上的粪便污染。本研究的目的是评估这些公共厕所干预措施对加利福尼亚州旧金山暴露粪便报告的影响。
我们评估了 2014 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 1 月 1 日实施的各种公共厕所干预措施对通过 311 市政服务报告的暴露粪便的影响。通过空间和时间匹配,将 311 报告中暴露的粪便与 27 个旧金山 10 个社区的 27 个 Pit Stop 厕所干预措施相关联。我们进行了中断时间序列分析,比较了厕所附近干预前后粪便报告的发生率。
在安装了 13 个 Pit Stop 厕所后,每周的粪便报告减少了 12.47 份(p 值=0.0002)。在同一间厕所,从干预前的六个月到干预后,每周报告的数量下降(斜率变化=-0.024[95%置信区间=-0.033,-0.014])。在一些安装了新厕所的厕所(米申区和金门公园)和一些提供厕所服务员的厕所(米申区、卡斯楚/上市场区和金融区/南滩区),粪便报告也有所减少。
增加公共厕所的使用减少了旧金山的粪便报告,特别是在有无家可归者的社区。在一些有 PEH 的社区增加厕所服务员似乎也减少了粪便报告。这些干预措施应在社区层面进行质量审计、观察使用数据和用户体验,以便根据社区的具体需求调整卫生干预措施。