| Literature DB >> 30851729 |
Zemichael Gizaw1, Ayenew Addisu2, Henok Dagne3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Soil-transmitted helminthes (STH) infections are among the most common infections worldwide and affect the most deprived communities. Adequate water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) prevents environmental contamination, thereby preventing transmission of STH. Cognizant of this, WASH education was implemented in rural Dembiya to reduce intestinal parasitic infections. This study was, therefore, conducted to assess the impacts of the intervention on households' WASH conditions and prevalence of intestinal parasitic infections.Entities:
Keywords: Children aged 6–59 months; Intestinal parasitic infections; Rural Dembiya; Uncontrolled before and after intervention study; WASH education
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30851729 PMCID: PMC6408793 DOI: 10.1186/s12199-019-0774-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Prev Med ISSN: 1342-078X Impact factor: 3.674
Fig. 1A frame work shows short summary of WASH intervention program in rural Dembiya, northwest Ethiopia
Household-level indicators by domain used to track changes due to the interventions in rural Dembiya, northwest Ethiopia
| Domains | Indicators |
|---|---|
| Drinking water safety | % of households with children under five that practiced one or more home-based water treatment methods |
| Sanitation | % of households with children under five using hygienic latrine facilities |
| Hygiene | % of children whose personal hygiene condition is clean |
| % of mothers or care givers whose hand washing practice is good | |
| Parasitic infections | % of under five children who had one or more intestinal parasitic infections |
Socio-demographic characteristics of study participants in the baseline (May 2017) and endline (May 2018) surveys in rural Dembiya, northwest Ethiopia
| Socio-demographic variables | Baseline survey | Endline survey |
|---|---|---|
| Sex of children | ||
| Male | 106 (47.1) | 158 (52.3) |
| Female | 119 (52.9) | 144 (47.7) |
| Age of children | ||
| 6–24 | 59 (26.2) | 96 (31.8) |
| > 24 | 166 (73.8) | 206 (68.2) |
| Maternal education | ||
| No formal education | 180 (80.0) | 248 (82.1) |
| Have formal education | 45 (20.0) | 54 (17.9) |
WASH condition before (May 2017) and after the intervention (May 2018) in rural Dembiya, northwest Ethiopia
| WASH variables | Baseline | Endline | % point change | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage of children whose personal hygiene condition is clean | 3 (1.3) | 104 (34.4) | 33.1 | < 0.05* |
| Percentage of mothers or caregivers whose hand washing practice is good | 55 (24.4) | 206 (68.2) | 43.8 | < 0.001 |
| Percentage of households practiced home-based water treatment | 17 (7.6) | 142 (47.0) | 39.4 | < 0.001 |
| Percentage of households used sanitary latrine | 72 (32.0) | 148 (49.0) | 17.0 | < 0.05 |
*Fisher’s exact test
Common home-based water treatment methods practiced before (May 2017) and after the intervention (May 2018) by the community of rural Dembiya
| Home-based water treatment methods | Baseline ( | Endline ( |
|---|---|---|
| Water guard (chlorine solution) | 13 (5.8) | 142 (47.0) |
| Solar disinfection | 1 (0.4) | – |
| Boiling | 2 (0.9) | – |
| Cloth sieve filtration | 1 (0.4) | – |
| No treatment methods used | 208 (92.4) | 160 (53.0) |
Fig. 2Common intestinal parasitic infections identified among children aged 6–59 months at the baseline (May 2017) and endline (May 2018) in rural Dembiya, northwest Ethiopia
The effect of WASH education on childhood intestinal parasitic infections in rural Dembiya, northwest Ethiopia
| Intestinal parasitic infections | Baseline ( | Endline ( | PR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage of under five children who had at least one intestinal parasitic infection | 58 (25.8) | 48 (23.8) | 0.92 (0.62, 1.38) |