共 12 条
Evaluation of a pre-existing, 3-year household water treatment and handwashing intervention in rural Guatemala
被引:89
作者:
Arnold, Benjamin
[1
]
Arana, Byron
[2
]
Maeusezahl, Daniel
[3
]
Hubbard, Alan
[4
]
Colford, John M., Jr.
[1
]
机构:
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Div Epidemiol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[2] Univ Valle Guatemala, Ctr Hlth Studies, Guatemala City, Guatemala
[3] Univ Basel, Dept Publ Hlth & Epidemiol, Swiss Trop Inst, Basel, Switzerland
[4] Univ Calif Berkeley, Div Biostat, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词:
Household water treatment;
handwashing;
intervention;
sustainability;
propensity score matching;
targeted maximum likelihood;
Guatemala;
POINT-OF-USE;
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR;
CONTROLLED-TRIAL;
CHILD ILLNESS;
DIARRHEA;
HEALTH;
PREVALENCE;
SANITATION;
COUNTRIES;
DISEASES;
D O I:
10.1093/ije/dyp241
中图分类号:
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号:
1004 ;
120402 ;
摘要:
Methods We present an extension of previously published design (propensity score matching) and analysis (targeted maximum likelihood estimation) methods to evaluate the behavioural and health impacts of a pre-existing but non-randomized intervention (a 3-year, combined household water treatment and handwashing campaign in rural Guatemala). Six months after the intervention, we conducted a cross-sectional cohort study in 30 villages (15 intervention and 15 control) that included 600 households, and 929 children < 5 years of age. Results The study design created a sample of intervention and control villages that were comparable across more than 30 potentially confounding characteristics. The intervention led to modest gains in confirmed water treatment behaviour [risk difference = 0.05, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.02-0.09]. We found, however, no difference between the intervention and control villages in self-reported handwashing behaviour, spot-check hygiene conditions, or the prevalence of child diarrhoea, clinical acute lower respiratory infections or child growth. Conclusions To our knowledge this is the first post-intervention follow-up study of a combined household water treatment and handwashing behaviour change intervention, and the first post-intervention follow-up of either intervention type to include child health measurement. The lack of child health impacts is consistent with unsustained behaviour adoption. Our findings highlight the difficulty of implementing behaviour-based household water treatment and handwashing outside of intensive efficacy trials.
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页码:1651 / 1661
页数:11
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