| Literature DB >> 29557327 |
Rebecca Lyn Ritter1, Dorothy Peprah2,3, Clair Null4,3, Christine L Moe3, George Armah5, Joseph Ampofo6, Nii Wellington7, Habib Yakubu3, Katharine Robb3, Amy E Kirby3, Yuke Wang3, Katherine Roguski3, Heather Reese3, Chantal A Agbemabiese5, Lady Asantewa B Adomako6, Matthew C Freeman8,3, Kelly K Baker1,3.
Abstract
In crowded urban settlements in low-income countries, many households rely on shared sanitation facilities. Shared facilities are not currently considered "improved sanitation" because of concerns about whether hygiene conditions sufficiently protect users from the feces of others. Prevention of fecal exposure at a latrine is only one aspect of sanitary safety. Ensuring consistent use of latrines for feces disposal, especially child feces, is required to reduce fecal contamination in households and communities. Household crowding and shared latrine access are correlated in these settings, rendering latrine use by neighbors sharing communal living areas as critically important for protecting one's own household. This study in Accra, Ghana, found that household access to a within-compound basic latrine was associated with higher latrine use by children of ages 5-12 years and for disposal of feces of children < 5 years, compared with households using public latrines. However, within-compound access was not associated with improved child feces disposal by other caregivers in the compound. Feces was rarely observed in household compounds but was observed more often in compounds with latrines versus compounds relying on public latrines. Escherichia coli and human adenovirus were detected frequently on household surfaces, but concentrations did not differ when compared by latrine access or usage practices. The differences in latrine use for households sharing within-compound versus public latrines in Accra suggest that disaggregated shared sanitation categories may be useful in monitoring global progress in sanitation coverage. However, compound access did not completely ensure that households were protected from feces and microbial contamination.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29557327 PMCID: PMC5953368 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.17-0654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 2.345
Coding of reported sanitation access, use by child demographic groups, and hygiene conditions in households in four low-income urban neighborhoods in Accra, Ghana
| Sanitation exposure | Levels of indicator |
|---|---|
| Sanitation access | Within-compound improved latrine |
| Public facility | |
| Defecation location in the compound of children aged 5–12 years | Children in the compound defecate in a household, compound, or public latrine |
| Children do not use facility, but defecate in open | |
| Defecation location of children aged < 5 years | Children defecate in potties, diapers, or latrines |
| Children defecate on ground or in drain | |
| Caretakers’ disposal location for feces from children aged < 5 years | Feces disposed in latrine |
| Feces left or thrown on ground or disposed of in open drains or rubbish | |
| Perception that other mothers sharing the same compound use diapers, potties, or latrines to capture feces for children aged less than 5 years vs. permit open defecation | Yes |
| No | |
| Perception that other mothers in the same compound leave feces for children aged less than 5 years on ground in the compound vs. dispose elsewhere | Other mothers do not leave feces on ground in the compound |
| Other mothers leave feces on ground in the compound | |
| Human feces observed on ground in the compound | Yes |
| No |
Within-compound access includes households with private (“safely managed” or “basic” according to the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program [JMP]) or shared (“limited” according to the WHO/UNICEF JMP) improved latrines.
Sociodemographic characteristics for 785 urban households in four low-income neighborhoods of Accra, Ghana, by reported compound and public latrine access level
| Sociodemographic characteristics | Within-compound latrine, | Public latrine, | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education of caregiver, % ( | |||
| No formal education | 9.1 (18) | 25.8 (151) | < 0.0001 |
| Completed primary | 18.1 (36) | 27.8 (163) | |
| Completed secondary or higher | 72.9 (145) | 46.4 (272) | |
| Tenancy status (own), % ( | 62.3 (124) | 62.5 (366) | 0.97 |
| Religion, % ( | |||
| Christian | 82.4 (164) | 70.5 (413) | 0.004 |
| Muslim | 17.1 (34) | 27.8 (163) | |
| Other | 0.5 (1) | 1.7 (10) | |
| Proportion of households sharing a compound with other households, % ( | 79.6 (163) | 82.5 (442) | 0.33 |
| Number of people in a household, mean (SD) | 5.2 (3.6) | 6.4 (41.2) | 0.67 |
| Wealth index, mean (SD) | 0.44 (0.64) | −0.11 (1.04) | < 0.0001 |
| Water source, % ( | |||
| Sachet | 78.4 (156) | 78.0 (457) | 0.96 |
| Municipal piped water | 21.1 (42) | 21.3 (125) | |
| Stored piped water | 0.5 (1) | 0.7 (4) | |
| Animal presence in HH, % ( | 33.7 (67) | 27.7 (162) | 0.11 |
Within-compound access includes households with private (“safely managed” or “basic” according to the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program [JMP]) or shared (“limited” according to the WHO/UNICEF JMP) improved latrines.
P value for differences in number (percentage) of households from χ2 distribution and from analysis of variance for mean and standard deviation (SD).
Accounted for 28% of variance in wealth in this population.
Unadjusted and adjusted odds of household feces disposal practices based on the type of latrine access in four low-income urban neighborhoods of Accra, Ghana
| Latrine usage practices | Within-compound latrine, % ( | Public latrine, % ( | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Use of latrines vs. open defecation for children between 5 and 12 years of age, | 93.8 (91/97) | 82.5 (249/302) | 2.62 (1.00, 6.90) | |
| Use of latrines, potties, or diapers vs. open defecation by children < 5 years of age, | 98.7 (76/77) | 95.6 (307/321) | 3.47 (0.45, 26.8) | 1.61 (0.17, 15.1) |
| Disposal of child feces in latrine vs. open drain or ground, trash, | 52.0 (40/77) | 34.0 (109/321) | ||
| Perception that other mothers in the same compound use potties for child defecation vs. open defecation, | 65.0 (102/157) | 68.2 (212/311) | 0.87 (0.58, 1.30) | 0.71 (0.44, 1.15) |
| Perception that other mothers in the same compound leave child feces on ground vs. dispose elsewhere, | 5.3 (9/171) | 10.9 (38/349) | 0.71 (0.30, 1.72) | |
| Human feces observed on ground in the compound vs. not observed, | 5.0 (10/199) | 2.6 (15/586) | 2.01 (0.89, 4.56) | 2.99 (1.00, 8.94) |
CI = confidence interval; Ref. = reference; OR = odds ratio. Bold reflects association significant at P < 0.05. Proportion of households reporting a latrine usage practice are reported as % and number out of total number of households in the on-site or public latrine group.
Adjusted models include variables for household neighborhood, religion, wealth index, education of child caregiver, number of persons living in the household, and tenancy status.
Children aged between 5 and 12 years in the household.
Children aged < 5 years in the household.
Households that share a compound yard with other households.
Figure 1.Wilcoxon rank sum score boxplots of log10 Escherichia coli colony-forming units (cfu) per set of hands by (A) level of shared latrine access, (B) defecation location by children 5-12 years, (C) defecation location by children <5 years, (D) disposal location for child feces by caregivers, (E) use of potties by neighbors in compound for <5 child defecation, (F) neighbors in compound leave child feces on ground, and (G) observed human and animal feces on ground. This figure appears in color at www.ajtmh.org.
Figure 2.Wilcoxon rank sum score boxplots of log10 Escherichia coli colony-forming units (cfu) per 100 cm2 surface area by (A) level of shared latrine access, (B) defecation location by children 5-12 years, (C) defecation location by children <5 years, (D) disposal location for child feces by caregivers, (E) use of potties by neighbors in compound for <5 child defecation, (F) neighbors in compound leave child feces n ground, and (G) observed human and animal feces on ground. This figure appears in color at www.ajtmh.org.
Figure 3.Wilcoxon rank sum score boxplots of log10 human adenovirus genomic copies (hAdv) per 100 cm2 surface area by (A) level of shared latrine access, (B) defecation location by children 5-12 years, (C) defecation location by children <5 years, (D) disposal location for child feces by caregivers, (E) use of potties by neighbors in compound for <5 child defecation, (F) neighbors in compound leave child feces on ground, and (G) observed human and animal feces on ground. This figure appears in color at www.ajtmh.org.