The role of water, sanitation and hygiene interventions in reducing soil-transmitted helminths: interpreting the evidence and identifying next steps

被引:0
作者
Susana Vaz Nery
Amy J. Pickering
Ebba Abate
Abraham Asmare
Laura Barrett
Jade Benjamin-Chung
Donald A. P. Bundy
Thomas Clasen
Archie C. A. Clements
John M. Colford
Ayse Ercumen
Siobhan Crowley
Oliver Cumming
Matthew C. Freeman
Rashidul Haque
Birhan Mengistu
William E. Oswald
Rachel L. Pullan
Rita G. Oliveira
Katey Einterz Owen
Judd L. Walson
Ashrafedin Youya
Simon J. Brooker
机构
[1] Kirby Institute,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[2] University of New South Wales,Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health
[3] Tufts University,Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases
[4] Ethiopian Public Health Institute,Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health
[5] World Vision Ethiopia,Faculty of Health Sciences
[6] Children’s Investment Fund Foundation,Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources
[7] University of California,Global Health
[8] London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine,Department of Global Health
[9] Emory University,Environmental Health
[10] Curtin University,undefined
[11] North Carolina State University,undefined
[12] International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research,undefined
[13] Bangladesh,undefined
[14] Neglected Tropical Diseases,undefined
[15] Federal Ministry of Health,undefined
[16] Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,undefined
[17] University of Washington,undefined
[18] Federal Ministry of Health,undefined
来源
Parasites & Vectors | / 12卷
关键词
Soil-transmitted helminths; Water; Sanitation; Hygiene; WASH;
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摘要
The transmission soil transmitted helminths (STH) occurs via ingestion of or contact with infective stages present in soil contaminated with human faeces. It follows therefore that efforts to reduce faecal contamination of the environment should help to reduce risk of parasite exposure and improvements in water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) are seen as essential for the long-term, sustainable control of STH. However, the link between WASH and STH is not always supported by the available evidence from randomised controlled trials, which report mixed effects of WASH intervention on infection risk. This review critically summarises the available trial evidence and offers an interpretation of the observed heterogeneity in findings. The review also discusses the implications of findings for control programmes and highlights three main issues which merit further consideration: intervention design, exposure assessment, and intervention fidelity assessment.
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