Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, Washington, USA
Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
BMJ Open. 2023 Mar 2;13(3):e067341. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-067341.
Despite clear linkages between provision of clean water and improvements in child health, limited information exists about the health impacts of large water infrastructure improvements in low-income settings. Billions of dollars are spent annually to improve urban water supply, and rigorous evaluation of these improvements, especially targeting informal settlements, is critical to guide policy and investment strategies. Objective measures of infection and exposure to pathogens, and measures of gut function, are needed to understand the effectiveness and impact of water supply improvements.
In the PAASIM study, we examine the impact of water system improvements on acute and chronic health outcomes in children in a low-income urban area of Beira, Mozambique, comprising 62 sub-neighbourhoods and ~26 300 households. This prospective matched cohort study follows 548 mother-child dyads from late pregnancy through 12 months of age. Primary outcomes include measures of enteric pathogen infections, gut microbiome composition and source drinking water microbiological quality, measured at the child's 12-month visit. Additional outcomes include diarrhoea prevalence, child growth, previous enteric pathogen exposure, child mortality and various measures of water access and quality. Our analyses will compare (1) subjects living in sub-neighbourhoods with the improved water to those living in sub-neighbourhoods without these improvements; and (2) subjects with household water connections on their premises to those without such a connection. This study will provide critical information to understand how to optimise investments for improving child health, filling the information gap about the impact of piped water provision to low-income urban households, using novel gastrointestinal disease outcomes.
This study was approved by the Emory University Institutional Review Board and the National Bio-Ethics Committee for Health in Mozambique. The pre-analysis plan is published on the Open Science Framework platform (https://osf.io/4rkn6/). Results will be shared with relevant stakeholders locally, and through publications.
尽管提供清洁水与改善儿童健康之间存在明显联系,但在低收入环境中,大型水基础设施改善对健康的影响的信息有限。每年都有数以十亿美元计的资金用于改善城市供水,因此,严格评估这些改善措施,尤其是针对非正规住区的措施,对于指导政策和投资战略至关重要。需要客观的感染和病原体暴露指标以及肠道功能指标来了解供水改善的效果和影响。
在 PAASIM 研究中,我们研究了莫桑比克贝拉市一个低收入城区水系统改善对儿童急性和慢性健康结果的影响,该城区由 62 个邻里和约 26300 户家庭组成。这项前瞻性匹配队列研究跟踪了 548 对母婴对,从妊娠晚期到 12 个月大。主要结果包括在儿童 12 个月就诊时测量的肠道病原体感染、肠道微生物组组成和水源饮用水微生物质量的指标。其他结果包括腹泻流行率、儿童生长、以前的肠道病原体暴露、儿童死亡率以及各种水接入和质量的衡量指标。我们的分析将比较(1)生活在有改善供水的邻里的儿童与生活在没有这些改善的邻里的儿童;(2)家庭有自来水连接的儿童与没有这种连接的儿童。这项研究将提供关键信息,以了解如何优化投资以改善儿童健康,填补关于向低收入城市家庭提供自来水的影响的信息空白,同时使用新的胃肠道疾病结果。
这项研究得到了埃默里大学机构审查委员会和莫桑比克国家卫生生物伦理委员会的批准。预分析计划在开放科学框架平台上发布(https://osf.io/4rkn6/)。结果将在当地与相关利益攸关方分享,并通过出版物分享。