| Literature DB >> 30696023 |
Abstract
Many schools in low-income countries have inadequate access to water facilities, sanitation and hygiene promotion. A systematic review of literature was carried out that aimed to identify and analyse the impact of water, sanitation and hygiene interventions (WASH) in schools in low-income countries. Published peer reviewed literature was systematically screened during March to June 2018 using the databases PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library, Science Direct, and Google Scholar. There were no publication date restrictions. Thirty-eight peer reviewed papers were identified that met the inclusion criteria. The papers were analysed in groups, based on four categories of reported outcomes: (i) reduction of diarrhoeal disease and other hygiene-related diseases in school students; (ii) improved WASH knowledge, attitudes and hygiene behaviours among students; (iii) reduced disease burden and improved hygiene behaviours in students' households and communities; (iv) improved student enrolment and attendance. The typically unmeasured and unreported 'output' and/or 'exposure' of program fidelity and adherence was also examined. Several studies provide evidence of positive disease-related outcomes among students, yet other assessments did not find statistically significant differences in health or indicated that outcomes are dependent on the nature and context of interventions. Thirteen studies provide evidence of changes in WASH knowledge, attitudes and behaviours, such as hand-washing with soap. Further research is required to understand whether and how school-based WASH interventions might improve hygiene habits and health among wider family and community members. Evidence of the impact of school-based WASH programs in reducing student absence from school was mixed. Ensuring access to safe and sufficient water and sanitation and hygiene promotion in schools has great potential to improve health and education and to contribute to inclusion and equity, yet delivering school-based WASH intervention does not guarantee good outcomes. While further rigorous research will be of value, political will and effective interventions with high program fidelity are also key.Entities:
Keywords: WASH; hygiene; intervention; sanitation; schools; water
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30696023 PMCID: PMC6388361 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16030359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart showing procedure for article selection.
Outcome measures reported in included articles (n = 38).
| Outcome measure | % of studies | Studies | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Impact on diarrhoeal disease and other hygiene-related diseases in school students | 47% (18/38) | Bieri et al. 2013 [ | Garn et al. 2016 [ |
| Changes in WASH knowledge, attitudes and hygiene behaviours among students | 34% (13/38) | Bieri et al. 2013 [ | Hetherington et al. 2017 [ |
| Impact on disease burden and hygiene in students’ households/communities | 16% (6/38) | Blanton et al. 2010 [ | Freeman & Clasen 2011 [ |
| Changes in student enrolment and school attendance | 32% (12/38) | Boubacar Maïnassara & Tohon 2014 [ | Montgomery et al. 2012 [ |
| Intervention fidelity | 11% (4/38) | Alexander et al. 2013 [ | Garn et al. 2017 [ |
Published evaluations of WASH in schools in low-income countries.
| Number | Authors | Country | Study Design | Sample | Exposures/Intervention | Measured Outcomes | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alexander et al. 2013 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 70 schools divided into a control group ( | Intervention schools received a budget for WASH-related items. One group received no further intervention. Second group received funding for WASH attendant and WASH infrastructure repairs. Third group given guide for monitoring WASH conditions. | Quality of school latrines, rainwater-harvesting systems, handwashing facilities, and other school infrastructure; maintenance and cleanliness of latrines; drinking water treatment. Intervention fidelity. | Intervention schools made significant improvements in provision of soap, handwashing water, treated drinking water, and clean latrines. Unclear whether expanded interventions out-performed budget-only intervention. |
| 2 | Bieri et al. 2013 [ | China | Cluster-randomized trial | 38 schools | Schools randomly assigned to a health-education package—a cartoon video about STHs, pamphlet, teacher-training workshop, essay competition—or a control package of a health-education poster. | Infection rates with soil-transmitted helminths, knowledge about soil-transmitted helminths, self-reported hygiene behaviours, and observed hand-washing behaviour. | Health-education package increased students’ knowledge of STHs, improved hygiene behaviour, and reduced STH infection by 50% within 1 school year. |
| 3 | Blanton et al. 2010 [ | Kenya | Before and after intervention study | 17 schools (666 students at baseline) | Installation of drinking water and hand-washing stations in schools; teacher training on WASH promotion; hygiene education for students; distribution of instructional comic books to students; school children encouraged to promote water treatment and handwashing in schools and households. | Water handling survey of pupils’ parents at 3 and 13 months. Household stored water tested for chlorine at 3 and 13 months. | The program resulted in pupil-to-parent knowledge transfer around water treatment and increases in household water treatment practices that were sustained over 1 year and reduction in student absentee rates. |
| 4 | Boubacar Maïnassara and Tohon 2014 [ | Niger | Before and after intervention study | 6 schools (sample of children aged 7 to 12 years; | Installation of clean water outlets, latrines, handwashing stations and clean drinking-water; student, teacher and parent hygiene education; display of hygiene promotion materials. | Student-reported symptoms of diarrhoea, water consumption habits, sources of drinking water at school, latrine usage, hygiene behaviours. Teacher-reported student absence. STH infection diagnosed via stool samples. | A reduction in self-reported diarrhoea cases and abdominal pain was noted in both intervention and control schools. Student absence increased post-project, but not as much as in control schools. Carriage of at least one parasite reduced in intervention schools, but findings were not statistically significant. There was an increase in reported handwashing in intervention schools. |
| 5 | Bowen et al. 2007 [ | China | Cluster randomized trial | 87 primary schools | Control: standard government hygiene education (i.e., annual statement about washing hands after using the toilet and before eating). Standard intervention: standard govt. education plus handwashing program. Expanded intervention: standard govt. education plus handwashing program, soap, and peer hygiene monitors. | Student absence rates | Provision of standard and expanded hand-washing promotion program and soap in schools was associated with significantly reduced days and episodes of student absence. |
| 6 | Caruso et al. 2014 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 17,564 pupils in 60 schools | Low-cost environmental-level latrine cleaning intervention as an added element following previously received WASH improvements in schools. | Latrine conditions and use; student absence | The addition of a latrine cleaning component may not have affected student absence beyond reductions attributable to the original school-based intervention. |
| 7 | Chard and Freeman 2018 [ | Laos People’s Democratic Republic | Randomized controlled trial | 100 public primary schools: 50 intervention and 50 comparison. | Interventions schools. Hardware; water supply, school sanitation facilities, handwashing facilities. Software; classroom ceramic water filter, group handwashing with soap at critical times, student-led cleaning and maintenance of toilets, school compound maintenance. | WASH behaviors, i.e., student toilet use, daily group handwashing, individual handwashing practice. Intervention fidelity. | Intervention schools had sustained service improvements: i.e., access to toilets, handwashing facilities, and safe drinking water. There were improvements in pupils’ WASH behaviors: use of school toilet, increased handwashing with soap, and habitual daily group handwashing. 88% of schools received the intervention as per design; school-level adherence was lower. |
| 8 | Chard et al. 2018 [ | Mali | Matched-control trial | 42 primary schools; 21 intervention and 21 matched comparison | A comprehensive school-based WASH intervention: school WASH infrastructure, WASH supplies and hygiene kits, behaviour change and training activities for students and teachers and within wider community, establishment of school-level financial, governance and management systems. | Vector-transmitted disease (dengue), food/water transmitted enteric disease ( | Food/water-transmitted enteric disease and person-to-person transmitted enteric disease was lower among pupils attending beneficiary schools. There was no evidence of difference in vector-transmitted disease. |
| 9 | Dreibelbis et al. 2013 [ | Kenya | Cross-sectional survey | 7966 children from 3857 households, enrolled in 175 primary schools. | Existing school WASH conditions. Household WASH conditions and knowledge, attitudes and practice. Household demographic characteristics. | Student school absence (household-reported) | School latrine cleanliness was the only school WASH factor associated with odds of absence. Demographic features (e.g., gender, SES, household characteristics) were important predictors of absence. |
| 10 | Dreibelbis et al. 2014 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 185 schools: ‘Water-available’ schools with water source within 1 km ( | Schools allocated to different interventions (including hygiene promotion + water treatment; hygiene promotion, water treatment, sanitation; control). | Prevalence of diarrhoea and two-week period prevalence of clinic visits among children <5 years with at least one sibling attending a program school. | In water-scarce areas, school WASH interventions that improve water supply can reduce diarrheal diseases among siblings of students. |
| 11 | Dreibelbis et al. 2016 [ | Bangladesh | Before and after intervention study | 2 primary schools (220 and 514 students) | Inexpensive nudges—i.e., environmental cues to prompt behaviour change—to encourage hand-washing with soap. Nudges included connecting latrines to handwashing station via brightly painted paved pathways; painting foot prints on pathways to guide students to handwashing stations. | Handwashing with soap (HWWS) | HWWS was increased the day after nudges were completed (from 4% to 68%) and further increased to 74% at two and six weeks post intervention. Nudge-based interventions have potential to improve HWWS among school children. |
| 12 | Dujister et al. 2017 [ | Cambodia, Indonesia and Lao PDR | Non-randomized clustered controlled trial | 1847 children attending public elementary schools at baseline; 1499 children at follow-up. | School-based “FIT programme” including daily group handwashing with soap and tooth-brushing with fluoride toothpaste, biannual school-based deworming, group handwashing facilities | Parasitological, weight, and oral health status of children. | The prevalence of STH infection, thinness, and oral health (odontogenic infection) did not significantly differ between baseline and follow-up, nor between intervention and control schools. Dental caries were significantly reduced. |
| 13 | Erismann et al. 2017 [ | Burkina Faso | Cluster-randomized trial | 360 randomly selected children, aged 8–15 years, | The intervention included school garden, nutrition, and WASH components. The WASH component involved installation of latrines and handwashing stations, rehabilitation of water pumps, and safe drinking water stations in classrooms. Hygiene and nutrition education was provided to teachers, school directors and community representatives. Treatment was provided to children found to be anaemic or infected with intestinal parasites. | Prevalence of intestinal parasitic infection and nutritional status. Children’s health knowledge, attitudes, and practices. | At end-line, the prevalence of intestinal parasitic infections decreased significantly in the intervention schools compared to control schools. Indices of undernutrition did not decrease in intervention schools. Safe handwashing practices significantly improved in the intervention schools. |
| 14 | Freeman and Clasen 2011 [ | India | Randomized case-control intervention study | 56 primary schools and 16 middle schools | Classrooms provided with a commercial water purifier; basic hygiene and water treatment information provided to students, parents, and teachers. | Awareness and uptake of effective water treatment practices at home. | No evidence that school-based intervention led to increased awareness or adoption of improved water management practices in homes. Membership in self-help group associated with uptake of water purifier. |
| 15 | Freeman et al. 2012 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 185 schools, including: 135 water-available schools (water source within 1 km) and 50 water-scarce schools (no water source within 1 km) | In water-available and water-scare sites, schools randomly allocated to different interventions (including hygiene promotion + water treatment; hygiene promotion, water treatment, sanitation; control). | Period prevalence and days of diarrhoeal illness in pupils that received different WASH interventions (including control schools). | In the absence of adequate water supplies, school-based WASH—i.e., water-supply improvement, hygiene promotion and water treatment, improved sanitation - can reduce diarrhoea. |
| 16 | Freeman et al. 2013 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 40 government primary schools. | Schools randomly allocated: Deworming plus a comprehensive school-based water treatment, sanitation, and hygiene intervention School-based deworming only | Infection with soil-transmitted helminths: hookworms, roundworm, and whipworm. Secondary outcome included the prevalence and egg count of trematode | The intervention reduced reinfection prevalence and egg count of roundworm, Ascaris lumbricoides. No evidence of effectiveness for |
| 17 | Freeman et al. 2014 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 185 public primary schools: 135 were water-available schools (water source within 1 km); 50 were water-scarce schools (no water source within 1 km. | Schools randomly allocated: Hygiene promotion and water treatment intervention including closed buckets, taps, drinking water storage, water disinfection; teacher training on hygiene behaviour change promotion. As above plus ventilated improved pit (VIP) latrines. Control group: receive intervention at conclusion of study. | Prevalence of diarrhoea, number of days of illness with diarrhoea, pupil absence. | Pupils attending ‘water-available’ schools that received hygiene promotion and water treatment (HP&WT) only, or WP&WT and sanitation improvements, showed no difference in illness compared to control schools. Pupils in ‘water-scarce’ schools that received a water-supply improvement, HP&WT and sanitation showed a reduction in diarrhoea incidence and days of illness. |
| 18 | Freeman et al. 2015 [ | Kenya | Cross-sectional study | 200 schools (20,000 children); in 70 schools, data collected on household and school WASH access and practice | Exposures: student shoe-wearing and soil-eating practices; household and school-level WASH conditions and access including latrine use, availability of drinking water, type and condition of latrines, availability of hand-washing facilities, soap for hand-washing, availability of tissue or water for use after defecation. | Soil-transmitted helminth infection. | Improved WASH access was generally, but not always, associated with lower intensity of STH infection. For school sanitation factors, the type of toilet, toilet conditions, and pupil to latrine ratio were all associated with overall or worm-specific infections. No clear trend of the relative importance of school versus household-level WASH emerged. |
| 19 | Garn et al. 2016 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 185 schools (divided into water-available and water-scarce groups) | School-level adherence to WASH interventions, as defined by the number of intervention components—water, latrines, soap—that had been adequately implemented. | Pupil diarrhea and soil-transmitted helminth infection. | There was reduced prevalence of diarrhea among pupils at water-scarce schools that adhered to 2–3 intervention components. In water-available schools, there was no evidence of reduced diarrhea with better adherence. No evidence of association between adherence and STH infection. |
| 20 | Garn et al. 2017 [ | Mali | Matched-control trial | 200 primary schools: 100 beneficiary schools and 100 matched control schools | Water and sanitation infrastructure, hand-washing facilities, wash supplies, hygiene promotion and capacity strengthening. Program fidelity (e.g., provision of water points and latrines) and program adherence (e.g., making soap available, maintaining latrine cleanliness) were also monitored. | Pupil diarrhea, respiratory symptoms, and absence from school. | Comprehensive WASH interventions that focus on adherence maximize the health effects of school WASH programs. WASH alone might not be sufficient to decrease pupils’ absenteeism. |
| 21 | Greene et al. 2012 [ | Kenya | Cluster-randomized trial | 135 public primary schools | Randomly assigned to: Hygiene promotion and water treatment including closed buckets, taps, drinking water storage, water disinfection solution; teachers training on hygiene and behaviour change promotion. As above plus ventilated improved pit (VIP) latrines. Control group: receive intervention at conclusion of study. | Intervention did not reduce risk of | |
| 22 | Grimes et al. 2017 [ | Ethiopia | Longitudinal study | 30 schools (3729 children provided blood, stool, and urine samples) | All schools were receiving school-feeding program from the United Nations World Food Programme. Half the schools received a WASH intervention upgrade. | School WASH infrastructure; student WASH knowledge, attitudes and practice; | No statistically significant associations were found between home sanitation and hookworm. There were no reported findings on the added impact of the WinS intervention on students’ health. |
| 23 | Grover et al. 2018 [ | Bangladesh | Cluster-randomised trial | 20 government schools. | Allocated to one of four interventions: Simultaneous handwashing infrastructure and nudge construction Sequential infrastructure then nudge construction Simultaneous infrastructure and high-intensity hygiene education (HE) Sequential handwashing infrastructure and HE | Rates of handwashing with soap (HWWS) after a toileting event. | 5 months post-intervention, the nudge intervention and HE intervention were equally effective at increasing HWWS after toileting. Simultaneous delivery of HE alongside handwashing infrastructure significantly outperformed sequential HE delivery; no significant difference was observed between sequential and simultaneous nudge intervention delivery. |
| 24 | Hetherington et al. 2017 [ | Tanzania | Qualitative methods and pre- & post- questionnaire (participatory action research) | 2 secondary boarding schools. | Train-the trainer model: Teacher workshops, school-based WASH lessons, extra-curricular activities, community events, “SHINE” clubs, non-stigmatizing activities to enable youth and communities to develop WASH strategies, a One Health sanitation science fair showcasing WASH projects. | WASH-related knowledge, attitudes and practices among students; level of engagement of students and community in the development and evaluation of sanitation and hygiene prototypes and health promotion strategies. | Statistically significant improvements in self-reported hygiene behaviour and knowledge, increased WASH communication. No changes in sanitation knowledge. Qualitative data highlighted WASH leadership among youth, enthusiasm from teachers and students, and community engagement. |
| 25 | Hunter et al. 2014 [ | Cambodia | Quasi-experimental case-control longitudinal study | 8 schools (4 case, 4 control) | Case schools received one 20 L container of treated drinking water per day (water treated by filtration and ultraviolet disinfection). | Weekly absenteeism rates. | A strong association between providing free safe drinking water and reduced absenteeism, though only in the dry season. |
| 26 | Karon et al. 2017 [ | Indonesia | Cross-sectional study | 75 schools (1780 students) | Beneficiary schools received: capacity building; improved toilet and water facilities and handwashing construction; hygiene promotion; strengthening of School Committees to create school WASH action plans. | The school hardware survey included questions about water, sanitation, hygiene, waste disposal and drainage. The student survey included questions on knowledge, attitudes and practice of hygiene habits at school and at home. | Intervention contributed to improved WASH infrastructure in schools, increased student communication with parents about hygiene, improved student WASH knowledge, increased rates of student handwashing after defecation, and lower reported rates of open defecation. |
| 27 | La Con et al. 2017 [ | Kenya | Mixed-method cross-sectional study | 28 schools | Handwashing and drinking water stations (containers with lids and taps on metal stands), bleach for water treatment, soap for handwashing, teacher-training, and educational materials. | Availability of soap and water at handwashing stations and treated drinking water 4 months after implementation; observation of student handwashing at stations both <10 m and >10 m from latrines; teacher-reported cleanliness and illness rates in pupils. | 4 months after installation handwashing and water stations and education, pupils used handwashing stations in their schools and used stations located closer to latrines (<10 m) much more frequently. |
| 28 | Koopman 1978 [ | Colombia | Cross-sectional | 8219 school children (in grades 1–5) from 14 municipal schools and 17 private elementary schools | Exposure: classroom size and condition of school toilets (i.e., broken toilets, water on floor, used paper on floor, faeces in bowl, faeces outside bowl). | Prevalence of diarrhea, vomiting, common cold, and head lice. | Unhygienic toilet conditions, particularly faeces in the bowl, were related to increased diarrhea prevalence. |
| 29 | Migele et al. 2007 [ | Kenya | Before and after study | 1 private rural primary school (pilot project); 380 students. | Teachers provided education about behaviour change/safe water and hygiene. Schools were provided with water storage vessels and water tanks for handwashing; water was treated with bleach. | Student diarrhoea rates (assessed via review of local clinic records). | Findings suggest that diarrhea incidence rates decreased after implementation of the intervention. |
| 30 | Montgomery et al. 2012 [ | Ghana | Non-randomized trial | 120 schoolgirls aged between 12 and 18 years. | Three levels of treatment: provision of pads with puberty education; puberty education alone; or control (no pads or education). | School attendance. | After 3 and 5 months, pads with puberty education significantly increased attendance. Puberty education alone resulted in a similar attendance level. |
| 31 | O’Reilly et al. 2008 [ | Kenya | Before and after survey | 9 schools (with nine comparison schools for some indicators); 390 students. | School-based safe water and hygiene programme: teachers trained on safe water system (SWS) and hand-washing; teachers instructed to form student safe water clubs, teach SWS and hygiene and encourage students to teach their parents. Schools provided with clay pots with narrow mouth, lid, and spigot; WaterGuard to treat water; water tanks with taps for hand-washing; soap. | School WASH facilities; stored water tested for chlorine. | The intervention reduced student absenteeism; safe water and hygiene knowledge transfer occurred from teacher to student; students’ knowledge of water treatment procedure increased significantly; students’ knowledge of appropriate times for hand-washing increased substantially; water treatment and hygiene knowledge transfer from student to parent and some evidence of behaviour change among parents. |
| 32 | Oster and Thornton 2009 [ | Nepal | Randomized control trial | 4 schools in rural Nepal, Chitwan province; 198 adolescent girls and their mothers. | Distribution of menstrual cups to adolescent girls in rural Nepal | School attendance and school-test scores. | No evidence that menstruation technology affects school attendance or test scores. Suggested that menstruation technology assists management of blood, but doesn’t reduce cramps and fatigue. |
| 33 | Patel et al. 2012 [ | Kenya | Cluster randomized trial | 42 rural primary schools | Safe water and hand hygiene education and installation of simple hand-washing and drinking water stations. | Student illness (respiratory illness and diarrhoea) and hygiene practices | The intervention produced improvement in hygiene knowledge and hand-washing techniques and a decrease in respiratory illness among students; no decrease in acute diarrhoea was observed. |
| 34 | Pickering et al. 2013 [ | Kenya | Cluster randomized trial | 6 primary schools in urban Nairobi (1364 students) | Schools randomly assigned to: Teacher hygiene training plus provision of waterless hand sanitizer dispenser Teacher hygiene training plus provision of liquid soap dispenser Control: no intervention | Hand hygiene behaviour using structured observation; perceptions of soap and sanitizer (at follow-up). | Hand cleaning after toileting was 82% at sanitizer schools, 38% at soap schools, and 37% at control schools. Students at sanitizer schools were 23% less likely to have rhinorrhoea than control students ( |
| 35 | Saboori et al. 2013 [ | Kenya | Cluster randomized trial | 60 public primary schools | Regular provision of soap and latrine-leaning materials to primary schools. | Hand washing after latrine use and | Observed hand washing with soap (HWWS) was significantly higher in schools that received soap (32%) and schools that received soap and latrine cleaning materials (38%) compared with controls (3%). There were no significant reductions in |
| 36 | Talaat et al. 2011 [ | Egypt | Cluster randomized trial | 60 elementary schools (30 intervention; 30 control) | Hand hygiene campaign: hand-washing twice per day in school; materials for students, teachers, parents; teacher’s guidebook for activities; hand-washing posters; student booklets; activities (e.g., theatres, song contests); campaign song; informational fliers for parents. | Laboratory-confirmed influenza A and B; student absenteeism and reasons for absence. | In the intervention group, absences caused by influenza-like illness, diarrhea, conjunctivitis and laboratory-confirmed influenza reduced by 40%, 30%, 67%, and 50%, respectively. The campaign was effective in reducing absenteeism. |
| 37 | Trinies et al. 2016 [ | Mali | Match-control trial | 200 schools (100 beneficiary schools; 100 matched comparison schools) | Installing/rehabilitating water points and latrines; distributing WASH supplies including soap, trash bins, disinfectant; hygiene promotion activities; training teachers, school management committees, school hygiene clubs; establishing financial, governance and management systems at the school level. | Recorded and self-reported student absence, and diarrhoea and respiratory infection among students. | There was a lower incidence of self-reported diarrhoea and respiratory infection among students in beneficiary schools. Students from intervention schools were less likely to report absence due to diarrhoea than pupils in control schools. |
| 38 | UNICEF 1994 [ | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 228 schools | Construction quality of water and sanitation system, rates of WASH infrastructure use, maintenance of WASH facilities, WASH knowledge among students, student hygiene behaviours. | Girls’ attendance rate at school | Girls’ school attendance rate was found to have increased following intervention. |