Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, Anchorage, AK, USA.
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2024 Jul-Aug;139(1_suppl):81S-88S. doi: 10.1177/00333549241255260. Epub 2024 May 27.
More than 3300 rural Alaska Native homes lack piped water, impeding hand hygiene. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention partnered with 10 Tribal communities and regional Tribal health organizations to install a low-cost, intermediate-technology water and sanitation system, the Miniature Portable Alternative Sanitation System (Mini-PASS). We assessed the impact of the Mini-PASS handwashing station on handwashing, other water-related uses, and problems encountered over time.
In this pre-postintervention study, we conducted semi-structured interviews by telephone seasonally with representatives of 71 households with the Mini-PASS from February 2021 through November 2022 to assess the impact of the units on water use and health.
Before Mini-PASS installation, all participating households primarily used washbasins for handwashing. Postintervention, more than 70% of households reported using the Mini-PASS as their primary handwashing method in all 3 follow-up intervals (3, 6-9, and 12 months postintervention). The proportion of households using the handwashing station for other household tasks increased during 12 months, from 51.4% (19 of 37) at 3 months postintervention to 77.8% (21 of 27) at 12 months postintervention. Although approximately 20% to 40% of households reported problems with their handwashing station during the 12 months postintervention, a large proportion of interviewees (47% to 60%) said they were able to conduct repairs themselves.
Households in rural Alaska quickly adopted the Mini-PASS for hand hygiene and other needs and were largely able to troubleshoot problems themselves. Further research evaluating the impact of improved handwashing behaviors facilitated by the Mini-PASS should be conducted.
超过 3300 户阿拉斯加农村原住民家庭缺乏管道供水,这阻碍了手部卫生。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,阿拉斯加原住民部落卫生联盟和疾病控制与预防中心与 10 个部落社区和地区部落卫生组织合作,安装了一种低成本、中级技术的水和卫生系统,即微型便携式替代卫生系统(Mini-PASS)。我们评估了 Mini-PASS 洗手站对手部卫生、其他与水有关的用途以及随着时间推移出现的问题的影响。
在这项干预前后研究中,我们在 2021 年 2 月至 2022 年 11 月期间通过电话季节性地对 71 户拥有 Mini-PASS 的家庭的代表进行了半结构化访谈,以评估这些单元对水的使用和健康的影响。
在 Mini-PASS 安装之前,所有参与家庭主要使用洗脸盆进行手部清洁。干预后,超过 70%的家庭报告在所有 3 个随访间隔(干预后 3、6-9 和 12 个月)中主要使用 Mini-PASS 进行手部清洁。在 12 个月期间,使用洗手站进行其他家庭任务的家庭比例增加,从干预后 3 个月的 51.4%(37 户中的 19 户)增加到干预后 12 个月的 77.8%(27 户中的 21 户)。尽管大约 20%至 40%的家庭在干预后 12 个月内报告了他们的洗手站出现问题,但很大一部分受访者(47%至 60%)表示他们能够自行进行维修。
阿拉斯加农村的家庭很快采用了 Mini-PASS 进行手部卫生和其他需求,并且很大程度上能够自行解决问题。应该进一步开展研究,评估由 Mini-PASS 促进的改善手部卫生行为的影响。