Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
Clinical Research Department, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2023 Feb 13;17(2):e0011103. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0011103. eCollection 2023 Feb.
Trachoma is the leading infectious cause of blindness. To reduce transmission, water, sanitation, and hygiene (WaSH) improvements are promoted through a comprehensive public health strategy. Evidence supporting the role of WaSH in trachoma elimination is mixed and it remains unknown what WaSH coverages are needed to effectively reduce transmission.
METHODS/FINDINGS: We used g-computation to estimate the impact on the prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-follicular among children aged 1-9 years (TF1-9) when hypothetical WaSH interventions raised the minimum coverages from 5% to 100% for "nearby" face-washing water (<30 minutes roundtrip collection time) and adult latrine use in an evaluation unit (EU). For each scenario, we estimated the generalized prevalence difference as the TF1-9 prevalence under the intervention scenarios minus the observed prevalence. Data from 574 cross-sectional surveys conducted in 16 African and Eastern Mediterranean countries were included. Surveys were conducted from 2015-2019 with support from the Global Trachoma Mapping Project and Tropical Data. When modeling interventions among EUs that had not yet met the TF1-9 elimination target, increasing nearby face-washing water and latrine use coverages above 30% was generally associated with consistent decreases in TF1-9. For nearby face-washing water, we estimated a ≥25% decrease in TF1-9 at 65% coverage, with a plateau upon reaching 85% coverage. For latrine use, the estimated decrease in TF1-9 accelerated from 80% coverage upward, with a ≥25% decrease in TF1-9 by 85% coverage. Among EUs that had previously met the elimination target, results were inconclusive.
Our results support Sustainable Development Goal 6 and provide insight into potential WaSH-related coverage targets for trachoma elimination. Targets can be tested in future trials to improve evidence-based WaSH guidance for trachoma.
沙眼是导致失明的主要传染病原因。为了减少传播,通过综合公共卫生策略来促进水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)的改善。支持 WASH 在沙眼消除中的作用的证据参差不齐,目前尚不清楚需要达到什么样的 WASH 覆盖率才能有效减少传播。
方法/发现:我们使用 g 计算来估计在评估单位(EU)中,假设 WASH 干预措施将“附近”洗脸水(往返收集时间<30 分钟)和成人厕所使用率的最低覆盖率从 5%提高到 100%时,对 1-9 岁儿童(TF1-9)中沙眼滤泡性炎症的流行率(TF1-9)的影响。对于每种情况,我们将广义流行率差异估计为干预情景下的 TF1-9 流行率减去观察到的流行率。来自 16 个非洲和东地中海国家的 574 项横断面调查的数据被包括在内。调查是在全球沙眼绘图项目和热带数据的支持下于 2015-2019 年进行的。在建模尚未达到 TF1-9 消除目标的 EU 中的干预措施时,附近洗脸水和厕所使用率覆盖率的增加通常与 TF1-9 的持续下降相关。对于附近洗脸水,我们估计在 65%的覆盖率下,TF1-9 下降了≥25%,达到 85%的覆盖率后趋于平稳。对于厕所使用,TF1-9 的估计下降率从 80%的覆盖率开始加速,在 85%的覆盖率时,TF1-9 下降了≥25%。对于先前已达到消除目标的 EU,结果尚无定论。
我们的结果支持可持续发展目标 6,并为潜在的与 WASH 相关的沙眼消除覆盖率目标提供了依据。可以在未来的试验中测试这些目标,以改善基于证据的沙眼 WASH 指导。