| Literature DB >> 30727975 |
Mahrukh Saleem1, Teresa Burdett1, Vanessa Heaslip2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The significance of sanitation to safeguard human health is irrefutable and has important public health dimensions. Access to sanitation has been essential for human dignity, health and well-being. Despite 15 years of conjunctive efforts under the global action plans like Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), 2.3 billion people have no access to improved sanitation facilities (flush latrine or pit latrine) and nearly 892 million of the total world's population is still practicing open defecation.Entities:
Keywords: Health inequalities; Low and middle income countries; Open defecation; Public health; Social inequalities; Women
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30727975 PMCID: PMC6364430 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6423-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Search Terms used in the PEO Framework
| Population | Exposure | Outcome1 | Outcome2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| wom#n or girl* or female* or “adolescent girl*” | Health | Social | |
| Open defcat* | health or wellness or wellbeing or quality of life | “social effects” | |
| disease* or infection* or illness or sickness or diarrhea or cholera or typhoid or outbreak or “preventable diseases” | safety or danger or lynch or “psychosocial stress” or fear or embarrassment or rape or abuse or violence |
*Refers to truncation of the search term
Inclusion Exclusion Criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Population | exclusively include analysis relevant to women between 13 and 50 years exposed to open defecation | All other population |
| Exposure | clear evidence of association between open defecation and its impacts on women’s physical, mental and social health, should include description of open defecation or inappropriate disposal of human excreta | study with no relevant analysis associating open defecation with health and social outcomes, no gender segregation |
| Place of study | low-income or developing countries (based upon world bank country classification) | developed countries |
| Setting | rural and remote areas | Urban areas |
| Time period | no time limit applied | – |
| Language | English or translated in English | All other languages |
| Study Design | empirical papers (primary or secondary data analysis), any primary study must consider ethical approval | editorials, commentaries, policy documents, case study, opinion pieces |
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Process
Summary of Included Studies
| Authors, year and origin | Type and domain of study | Sample size (n) | Aim | Measurement of exposure and outcome | Findings and Recommendations | Limitations and Critical Appraisal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jadhav et al. 2016 [ | Social: Quantitative | 75,619 women | Whether women’s lack of household sanitary facilities is associated with a higher likelihood of experiencing non-partner sexual violence (NPSV) | Based on two dichotomous questions | Multiple results: | Information from secondary data was not robust enough to explain the complex issue of open defecation in-depth; limited to past one year; findings potentially lack depth |
| Hirve et al. 2015 [ | Social: Mixed method approach | 308 women | To examine the sources and extent of psychosocial stress linked with latrine use or open defecation by women at home, workplace or schools | Survey questionnaires: Likert scale. Electronically recorded, steps taken to avoid data entry errors, STATAv11 used to analyse the data, psychosocial stressors tested using t test and chi square test | Clear evidence of association between various forms of stress and limited access to sanitation | Potential bias of social desirability was identified as the personal security concerns faced by adolescent girls were voiced by the teachers of school instead of girls in a focus group discussion |
| Winter and Barchi 2015 [ | Social: | 6191 women | To study the relationship between violence against women and open defecation and role of social disorganisation in influencing this relationship | Content analysis: Stata/MP 13.1 statistical analysis | Quantitative evidence of 40% greater odds of having experienced non partner sexual violence by women last 12 months (p < 0.05) | Limited information of past year |
| Sahoo et al. 2015 [ | Social: Qualitative | 56 women | To study the psychological and social impacts of sanitation routines among women of reproductive age | Grounded theory research, 56 in-depth interviews, digitally recorded and transcribed using MaxQDA software | 51 respondents faced environmental barriers to reach their site of defecation(fear of snake biting or other animals | Based on interviews; reported incidents may be biased |
| Janmohamed et al. 2016 [ | Health: Quantitative | To investigate any relationship between household sanitation facility and Hb concentration, BMI and underweight among women in their first trimester of gestation | Multivariable linear and logistic regression models | Nearly 60% of study population practicing open defecation (non-improved sanitation facility) | Limited discussion of open defection as a contributing factor | |
| Padhi et al. 2015 [ | Health: Population-based cohort study | 670 pregnant women | To quantify the risks of adverse pregnancy outcomes (APOs) i.e. event of preterm birth, low birth weight, abortions or miscarriages in relation to non-improved sanitation facility | Questionnaires and checklists | 58.17% of had no access to latrine, | Limited discussion of assessing the findings in context of literature evidence, lack of measurement of confounding risk factors (smoking, alcohol use, history of maternal health, etc.) for adverse pregnancy outcomes |
| Majumdar et al. 2009 [ | Health: Quantitative; Cross sectional study | 193 pregnant women | To study the magnitude and correlates of hookworm infestation among pregnant women | Face to face interview, digital recording, laboratory specimen testing | Open defecation is cofounding factor in prevalence of hookworm infestation among pregnant women | No age specified, |
| Kotian et al. 2014 | Health: Quantitative | Total sample size = 327 | To investigate the prevalence of intestinal parasitic infection in general population | Microbiological laboratory sample test,, multivariate data analysis | More women (17.07%) were infected with parasitic infection than men (8.33%) | Single laboratory observation, |
| Greenland et al. 2015 | Health: Quantitative | 1279 school children; 52% female (4–17 years) | To report the cases and intensity of soil-transmitted helminths | Sample test, survey (two-stage cluster sampling scheme); univariate and log binomial model, Stata 12 for analysis | 52% participants were female, | sample size confined to girls between the age of 4 and 17 years |