Institute for Educational Research and Innovation Studies (IERIS), University of Education, Winneba, Ghana.
Department of Environmental Health and Sanitation Education, University of Education, Winneba, Ghana.
BMC Res Notes. 2024 Feb 20;17(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s13104-024-06701-2.
The burden of children's disease in many low-and middle-income countries is associated with poor sanitation, including unsafe disposal of children's stool. Infants and toddler stools pose a greater public health risk than adults. Studies on stool disposal in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and Ghana have focused on prevalence, patterns, and associated factors. Nevertheless, these studies have not focused on factors that independently influence rural and/or urban child stool disposal. This study, therefore, examines factors associated with safe child stool disposal in rural areas separately from urban areas towards Ghana's readiness for ending open defaecation by 2030.
We examined young children's faecal disposal drawing on the sixth round of the nationally-representative Ghana Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) conducted in 2017/18. This study was restricted to children under two years, yielding a sub-sample of 3,476. Responses of caregivers or mothers who disposed of children less than two years faecal matter, their characteristics in addition to the child's age in months were analysed. A binary logistic regression was used to examine the factors associated with the safe disposal of young children's stools.
In the aggregated data, only 22% of households, regardless of their residence, dispose of their young children less than two years stools safely. From the disaggregated data, the rural analysis shows that 26% of young children's stools were safely disposed of, compared to 16% in the urban analysis. The urban analysis shows that the child's age, sex and caregiver's marital status were significantly associated with safe disposal of stools. On the other hand, child's age, caregiver listening to radio and household access to improved toilet facilities were significant in the rural analysis.
The safe practice of stool disposal was very low. The results of this study show that urgent and different policies and strategies are needed to address child stool disposal in urban residences compared to rural residences if we are to meet SDG targets of ending open defaecation.
在许多低收入和中等收入国家,儿童疾病负担与卫生条件差有关,包括儿童粪便处理不当。婴儿和学步儿童的粪便比成年人带来更大的公共卫生风险。撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)和加纳的粪便处理研究主要集中在流行率、模式和相关因素上。然而,这些研究并没有关注独立影响农村和/或城市儿童粪便处理的因素。因此,本研究分别考察了农村和城市地区与安全儿童粪便处理相关的因素,以期加纳能够在 2030 年前实现结束露天排便的目标。
我们利用 2017/18 年全国代表性加纳多指标类集调查(MICS)第六轮数据,研究了幼儿粪便处理情况。本研究仅限于 2 岁以下儿童,得出了 3476 名儿童的子样本。分析了不到 2 岁儿童粪便处理的照顾者或母亲的回答,以及他们的特征以及儿童的月龄。采用二元逻辑回归分析了与安全处理幼儿粪便相关的因素。
在汇总数据中,无论居住在何处,只有 22%的家庭安全处理他们不到 2 岁的幼儿粪便。从细分数据来看,农村分析显示,26%的幼儿粪便得到了安全处理,而城市分析中这一比例为 16%。城市分析显示,儿童年龄、性别和照顾者的婚姻状况与粪便的安全处理显著相关。另一方面,在农村分析中,儿童年龄、照顾者听广播和家庭使用改良厕所设施与安全粪便处理显著相关。
安全处理粪便的做法非常低。本研究结果表明,如果我们要实现结束露天排便的可持续发展目标,就需要针对城市住宅和农村住宅制定不同的政策和策略来解决儿童粪便处理问题。