| Literature DB >> 29370169 |
Maryann G Delea1,2, Hiwote Solomon1, Anthony W Solomon3, Matthew C Freeman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Efforts are underway to scale-up the facial cleanliness and environmental improvement (F&E) components of the World Health Organization's SAFE strategy for elimination of trachoma as a public health problem. Improving understanding of the F&E intervention landscape could inform advancements prior to scale-up, and lead to more effective and sustained behavior change. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29370169 PMCID: PMC5800663 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1PRISMA diagram of publication flow.
Summary of reviewed F&E-related grey literature.
| Title | Organization(s) | Date of publication | Means of identification | Type of document |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health promotion partnerships for trachoma elimination [ | Indigenous Eye Health Unit, University of Melbourne | September 2015 | W, I | |
| All you need for F&E: A practical guide for planning and partnering [ | ICTC | August 2015 | W, I | |
| Trachoma Action Planning: A planning guide for the national elimination of blinding trachoma [ | ICTC, KCCO | June 2015 | W | |
| Education and trachoma [ | School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne | April 2015 | W, I | |
| Formative research assessment and guidelines: Facial cleanliness and environmental sanitation [ | JHU—CCP | August 2014 | W | |
| Protocol and methods for trachoma situation analysis: Using a systematic process for understanding F&E for trachoma programs [ | JHU—CCP, Sightsavers, ICTC | February 2014 | W | |
| Understanding individual and contextual factors for development of a behavior change communication campaign for trachoma prevention in Busoga and Karamoja Regions, Uganda [ | Sightsavers, JHU—CCP | January 2014 | W | |
| ICTC principles for F&E [ | ICTC | 2014 | W | |
| Research to inform the development of behavior change interventions for "F" and "E" of the SAFE strategy in Turkana and Marsabit, Kenya [ | LSHTM, Kenya MoH | July 2013 | W | |
| WASHing away blinding trachoma [ | Sightsavers, WaterAid | April 2013 | W | |
| Clean faces, strong eyes [ | Indigenous Eye Health Unit, University of Melbourne | May 2012 | W, I | |
| How communities can control for trachoma without a big budget [ | ITI, The Carter Center | 2012 | W, D | |
| The end in sight: 2020 INSight [ | ICTC | July 2011 | W | |
| Trachoma resource book [ | Indigenous Eye Health Unit, University of Melbourne | May 2010 | W, I | |
| Women and trachoma: Achieving gender equity in the implementation of SAFE [ | KCCO, TCC, The Elfenworks Foundation | February 2009 | W | |
| The 'ngisipet' and trachoma prevention: solving the latrine problem in nomadic tribes [ | Ol Malo eye Project, Ol Malo Trust | December 2007 | W, D | |
| Communicable Disease Network Australia (CDNA) national guidelines for the public health management of trachoma [ | Communicable Disease Network Australia, Australia Health & Protection Principal Committee | March 2006 | W, I | |
| Implementing the SAFE strategy for trachoma control: A toolbox of interventions for promoting facial cleanliness and environmental improvement [ | The Carter Center, ITI | January 2006 | W, I | |
| Pit latrines for all households: The experience of Hulet Eju Enessie Woreda, Amhara National Regional State, Northwest Ethiopia [ | The Carter Center, Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health, Amhara Regional Health Bureau | September 2005 | W | |
| The SAFE strategy: Preventing trachoma—A guide for environmental sanitation and improved hygiene [ | WHO, ITI | 2000 | W, D | |
| Teaching series No. 07 –Trachoma [ | International Center for Eye Health, LSHTM | 1999 | W | |
| Trachoma: A women's health issue [ | The Global Alliance for Women's Health, Edna McConnell Clark Foundation | 1997 | W | |
| Achieving community support for trachoma control: a guide for district health work [ | WHO | 1995 | W, D | |
| Water, sanitation & hygiene for accelerating and sustaining progress on neglected tropical diseases: A global strategy 2015–2020 [ | WHO | August 2015 | W | |
| WASH and the neglected tropical diseases: A global manual for WASH implementers [ | Sightsavers, DFID, ITI, Children Without Worms, WaterAid, WASH Advocates, Emory University, CARE USA | February 2014 | W | |
| WASH: The silent weapon against NTDs [ | WaterAid, NNN | 2012 | W | |
| Handbook on community-led total sanitation | Institute for Development Studies, Plan UK | March 2008 | I | |
NOTES: Literature is presented by date of publication
* Document provided by multiple ICTC member organizations during literature solicitation process, and implemented in the context of trachoma elimination programs, therefore included in the review
Organizational acronyms: ICTC = International Coalition for Trachoma Control; KCCO = Kilimanjaro Center for Community Ophthalmology; JHU—CCP = Johns Hopkins University—Center for Communication Programs; LSHTM = London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; ITI = International Trachoma Initiative; DFID = Department for International Development; WHO = World Health Organization; NNN = Neglected Tropical Diseases NGDO Network
Means of identification: I = ICTC member literature solicitation; W = targeted website key word search; D = database search
Summary of implementation details from the F&E grey literature.
| Title | Intervention content and delivery | Level of implementation | Type of intervention |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health promotion partnerships for trachoma elimination | Employing medical, behavioral, & socio-economic approaches via multi-faceted health education strategies to incorporate 2 key F&E-related messages (i.e., “clean faces, strong eyes” & “safe & functional bathrooms”) into programming at numerous entry points within the community setting (e.g., cultural events, schools, early child & family well-being settings, clinics) | National, sub-national, community (e.g., school, early child & family well-being settings, clinics) & individual | Design, planning, implementation |
| All you need for F&E: A practical guide for planning and partnering | Creating and fostering cross-sectoral partnerships and collaboration, developing and implementing F&E interventions that facilitate related and sustainable behavior change, planning and monitoring of F&E activities and outcomes, sustainability thereof | National, sub-national, community | Design, planning, implementation |
| Trachoma Action Planning: A planning guide for the national elimination of blinding trachoma | Action planning, including identification of F&E partners, completion of a full F&E situation analysis, cataloguing of existing hygiene and related behavior change communication programs/events | National, sub-national (e.g., district) | Planning |
| Education and trachoma | Integrating facewashing & improved hygiene promotion into school curricula; establishing clean faces as the new social norm; ensuring safe & functional washing facilities are present & properly maintained with access to water, soap, paper towels, tissues, mirrors, & bins | Sub-national, school, community | Planning, implementation |
| Formative research assessment and guidelines: Facial cleanliness and environmental sanitation | Collating national and sub-national (e.g., district) level data, generating qualitative & quantitative data at community, household, and individual levels | National, sub-national, community, individual | Data generation, collation, synthesis |
| Protocol and methods for trachoma situation analysis: Using a systematic process for understanding F&E for trachoma programs | Creating and fostering networks and collaboration, collation of national and sub-national (e.g., district) level data | National, sub-national (e.g., district) | Design, planning |
| Understanding individual and contextual factors for development of a behavior change communication campaign for trachoma prevention in Busoga and Karamoja Regions, Uganda | Utilizing mixed methodological formative research that provides information to inform development of an F&E BCC campaign | Community | Data generation, collation, synthesis, design, planning |
| ICTC principles for F&E | Designing and implementing community-centered programs and interventions via active engagement of affected communities in planning, decision-making, and relevant training, with explicit efforts to involve marginalized populations | National, sub-national, community, with focus on action at national to district levels | Designing, planning, implementation (including M&E) |
| Research to inform the development of behavior change interventions for "F" and "E" of the SAFE strategy in Turkana and Marsabit, Kenya | Utilizing mixed methodological formative research that provides information to inform development of behavior change interventions for F&E | Community | Data generation, collation/synthesis, design, planning |
| WASHing away blinding trachoma | Administering a holistic approach to the implementation of the SAFE strategy that ensures the integration of F&E components from the outset of trachoma elimination and control programs to ensure the underlying causes, as well as the symptoms of the disease are addressed to break the transmission cycle | Global, national, sub-national, community | Design, implementation, advocacy |
| Clean faces, strong eyes | Developing and employing culturally appropriate health promotion resources and social marketing strategies via a consultative process to ensure: 1) the indigenous culture is respected; 2) clear & holistic messages; and 3) local people, environment, and popular culture are involved | National, sub-national, community | Design, planning, implementation |
| How communities can control for trachoma without a big budget | Designing and implementing community-based interventions that include promotion and uptake of individual, household, and community behaviors that prioritize and act to ensure faces are clean, household members (all community members) dispose of their feces in a safe manner, and households and communities are free of materials that attract flies | Community, household, individual | Design, planning, implementation |
| The end in sight: 2020 INSight | Employing five guiding principles that provide a framework for the path to elimination | Global, national, sub-national (e.g., district) | Planning, implementation |
| Trachoma resource book | Administering a program development, implementation, & evaluation approach that involves engagement and partnership with local community at all levels, and includes genuine collaboration & consultation, ensuring comprehensive implementation of the SAFE strategy via a workforce with appropriate knowledge, skills, & experience in trachoma control through regular training & support | National, sub-national, community | Design, implementation, monitoring |
| Women and trachoma: Achieving gender equity in the implementation of SAFE | Utilizing a gender-sensitive program approach via the use of strategies to: 1) recognize gender-specific attitudes toward & motivators of improved behaviors, 2) determine existing positive behaviors and effective channels of communication within the community—noting similarities & differences between men/women, and 3) segment audience to facilitate concurrent targeting of different groups | Community | Design, planning, implementation |
| The 'ngisipet' and trachoma prevention: solving the latrine problem in nomadic tribes | Engaging the community for the development of a locally acceptable and culturally appropriate alternative to improving environmental conditions amongst nomadic tribes | Community | Design, implementation |
| CDNA national guidelines for the public health management of trachoma | Ensuring engagement with local communities when planning, implementing, and evaluating trachoma programs; creating & fostering collaboration between public health units, primary health care, and other services working towards trachoma elimination; collection of high quality data to monitor & evaluate progress towards trachoma elimination by improving coverage, completeness, and timeliness of surveillance data in accordance with the minimum national trachoma dataset | Reporting & coordination: national; planning, implementation, monitoring: sub-national, community | Planning, implementation, monitoring |
| Implementing the SAFE strategy for trachoma control: A toolbox of interventions for promoting facial cleanliness and environmental improvement | Employing | Community | Design, implementation, monitoring & evaluation |
| Pit latrines for all households: The experience of Hulet Eju Enessie Woreda, Amhara National Regional State, Northwest Ethiopia | Mobilizing community (e.g., gaining community acceptance & support via triggering of latent demand/demand creation for sanitation & hygiene facilities); leaders working through existing structures, with reference to community practices & cultural norms; conducting training-of-the-trainer to empower community leaders, early adopters, community to build latrines, for demonstration purposes to encourage participation; conducting educational sessions on the benefits of latrine ownership & use | Community, with support from sub-national & national | Design, planning, implementation |
| The SAFE strategy: Preventing trachoma—A guide for environmental sanitation & improved hygiene | Employing an approach for participatory selection of interventions intended to address environmental sanitation & improved hygiene for prevention | Community | Implementation |
| Teaching series No. 07 –Trachoma | Implementing trachoma elimination and control programs via the district healthcare system to ensure agreement with the public health framework; ensuring communities take part in trachoma control activities, with assistance of members to identify factors which encourage transmission | Sub-national, community | Design, implementation, monitoring |
| Trachoma: A women's health issue | Creating & fostering cross-sectoral collaboration to enhance investment in community-based interventions for trachoma prevention & control via a women's health lens | Global, national, community | Design, implementation, advocacy |
| Achieving community support for trachoma control: a guide for district health work | Administering a community-based, participatory approach to learn from the community what they are willing & interested in doing to prevent trachoma, identify how selected interventions can be integrated into existing village health, education, religious, and social activities | Community | Design, planning, implementation |
| Water, sanitation & hygiene for accelerating and sustaining progress on neglected tropical diseases: A global strategy 2015–2020 | Creating and fostering cross-sectoral partnerships and collaboration | Global, national | Planning |
| WASH and the neglected tropical diseases: A global manual for WASH implementers | Integrating WASH-NTD initiatives, creating and fostering cross-sectoral collaboration via joint monitoring of trachoma-specific health outcomes and impacts to inform programmatic and policy change | National, sub-national, community | Design (of integrated programs), planning |
| WASH: The silent weapon against NTDs | Shifting program implementation to a | Global, national, sub-national, community | Design, planning, implementation |
| Handbook on community-led total sanitation* | Employing a community-based, participatory approach; stimulating latent demand and/or demand creation; cooperative approach that focuses on the collective benefit of stopping open defecation by concentrating on changing behaviors of the whole community as opposed to individuals | Community | Design, planning, implementation |
Fig 2Heat map visualizing emergent themes related to F&E intervention activities.
Behavioral determinants of improved F&E practices presented in the grey literature.
| |
| |
| Household and community-level |
| Varying |
| Practicing improved F&E-related behaviors induces |
| |
| Facilities |
| People |
| |
| |
| Local and community promoters |
| |
| Employing demand-side or combined demand- and supply-side interventions to gain acceptability of improved facilities/use thereof |
NOTE
* There are some psychosocial aspects of this determinant as well
Fig 3Proportion of endorsed F&E interventions addressing antecedent behavior change factors.