Department of Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Disease, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Global Development and Entrepreneurship, Graduate School of Global Development and Entrepreneurship, Handong Global University, Pohang, South Korea.
Glob Health Sci Pract. 2024 Jun 27;12(3). doi: 10.9745/GHSP-D-22-00541.
In sanitation policies, "improved sanitation" is often broadly described as a goal with little rationale for the minimum standard required. We conducted a secondary analysis of data collected as part of a cluster randomized controlled trial in rural Ethiopia. We compared the performance of well-constructed and poorly constructed pit latrines in reducing child diarrhea. In addition, we explored whether having a well-constructed household latrine provides indirect protection to neighbors if cluster-level coverage reaches a certain threshold. We followed up children aged younger than 5 years (U5C) of 906 households in rural areas of the Gurage zone, Ethiopia, for 10 months after community-led total sanitation interventions. A study-improved latrine was defined as having all the following: pit of ≥2 m depth, slab of any material, drop-hole cover, wall, roof, door, and handwashing facilities (water and soap observed). U5C in households with a study-improved latrine had 54% lower odds of contracting diarrhea than those living in households with a latrine missing 1 or more of the characteristics (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]=0.46; 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.27, 0.81; =.006). Analyses were adjusted for child age and sex, presence of improved water for drinking, and self-reported handwashing at 4 critical times. The odds of having diarrhea among those with an improved latrine based on the World Health Organization/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program (JMP) definition (i.e., pit latrines with slabs) were not substantially different from those with a JMP-unimproved latrine (aOR=0.99; 95% CI=0.56, 1.79; =.99). Of U5C living in households without a latrine or with a study-unimproved latrine, those in the high-coverage villages were less likely to contract diarrhea than those in low-coverage villages (aOR=0.55; 95% CI=0.35, 0.86; =.008). We recommend that academic studies and routine program monitoring and evaluation should measure more latrine characteristics and evaluate multiple latrine categories instead of making binary comparisons only.
在卫生政策中,“改善卫生条件”通常被广泛描述为一个目标,但缺乏最低标准的基本原理。我们对在埃塞俄比亚农村进行的一项集群随机对照试验中收集的数据进行了二次分析。我们比较了建造良好和建造不良的坑式厕所在减少儿童腹泻方面的效果。此外,我们还探讨了如果家庭厕所的集群覆盖率达到一定阈值,是否会对邻居提供间接保护。我们对埃塞俄比亚古拉格地区 906 户农村家庭中年龄在 5 岁以下的儿童(U5C)进行了为期 10 个月的随访,这些家庭接受了社区主导的全面卫生干预。研究改进后的厕所被定义为具有以下所有特征:≥2 米深的坑、任何材料的石板、防溅盖、墙壁、屋顶、门和洗手设施(观察到水和肥皂)。使用研究改进后的厕所的 U5C 患腹泻的几率比那些使用缺少 1 个或多个特征的厕所的家庭低 54%(调整后的优势比[aOR]=0.46;95%置信区间[CI]=0.27,0.81;=0.006)。分析调整了儿童年龄和性别、饮用水改善情况以及 4 个关键时间点的自我报告洗手情况。基于世界卫生组织/联合国儿童基金会联合监测规划(JMP)定义(即带有石板的坑式厕所),使用改进后的厕所的人患腹泻的几率与使用 JMP 未改进的厕所的人没有实质性差异(aOR=0.99;95% CI=0.56,1.79;=0.99)。在没有厕所或使用研究未改进厕所的 U5C 中,居住在高覆盖率村庄的人比居住在低覆盖率村庄的人患腹泻的可能性更小(aOR=0.55;95% CI=0.35,0.86;=0.008)。我们建议学术研究和常规方案监测和评估应测量更多的厕所特征,并评估多个厕所类别,而不是仅进行二元比较。