Lamb Jenny, Thorseth Astrid Hasund, MacDougall Amy, Thorsen William, White Sian
Department of Disease Control, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
Department of Medical Statistics, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E7HT, UK.
Health Promot Int. 2024 Dec 1;39(6). doi: 10.1093/heapro/daae117.
The Wash'Em process was developed to improve the design of handwashing behaviour change programmes during outbreaks and humanitarian crises. It aims to rapidly create evidence-based, contextualized handwashing programmes. Wash'Em was widely used during the COVID-19 pandemic. This multi-country secondary data analysis compares data emerging from Wash'Em during the pandemic, to understand whether commonalities in programming constraints or the determinants of handwashing behaviour existed across countries. Wash'Em datasets (n = 38) were verified prior to inclusion in secondary data analysis; descriptively summarized and then statistical summaries of homogeneity were derived. Wash'Em was implemented as intended during the pandemic, typically taking a small number of humanitarian staff less than a week to complete. Most actors reported using the recommendations suggested by the process but did so within relatively short-term and poorly financed prevention programmes. Homogeneity in the responses to the Wash'Em tools was low indicating that the determinants of handwashing behaviour during the pandemic were predominantly shaped by pre-existing factors rather than the nature of the health threat. Hygiene programmes during outbreaks should avoid 'copying and pasting' interventions from one setting to another and instead make time to holistically understand the behavioural determinants in a specific context and develop programme activities that are designed to address these. Particular attention should be given to factors in the physical and social environment that may enable or constrain handwashing behaviour, pre-existing disease vulnerabilities and the secondary and non-health impacts of outbreaks. Wash'Em provides one feasible way of contextualizing handwashing interventions in outbreak or humanitarian settings.
“洗手促进行动”(Wash'Em)流程旨在改进疫情爆发和人道主义危机期间的洗手行为改变计划设计。其目的是迅速制定基于证据且因地制宜的洗手计划。“洗手促进行动”在新冠疫情期间得到广泛应用。这项多国二次数据分析比较了疫情期间“洗手促进行动”产生的数据,以了解各国在计划制定限制因素或洗手行为决定因素方面是否存在共性。在纳入二次数据分析之前,对“洗手促进行动”数据集(n = 38)进行了核实;进行了描述性总结,然后得出了同质性的统计总结。“洗手促进行动”在疫情期间按预期实施,通常少数人道主义工作人员不到一周就能完成。大多数行为体报告称采用了该流程建议的方法,但多是在相对短期且资金不足的预防计划中这样做。对“洗手促进行动”工具的回答同质性较低,这表明疫情期间洗手行为的决定因素主要由既有因素塑造,而非健康威胁的性质。疫情期间的卫生计划应避免在不同环境中“复制粘贴”干预措施,而应花时间全面了解特定背景下的行为决定因素,并制定旨在解决这些因素的计划活动。应特别关注可能促进或限制洗手行为的物理和社会环境因素、既有的疾病易感性以及疫情的次生和非健康影响。“洗手促进行动”为在疫情或人道主义环境中因地制宜开展洗手干预提供了一种可行方法。