| Literature DB >> 31905628 |
Jesse D Contreras1, Joseph N S Eisenberg1.
Abstract
Three of four recent major sanitation intervention trials found no effect on diarrhea. These results conflicted with longstanding beliefs from decades of literature. To understand this discordance, we placed recent trials into the historical context that preceded them in two ways. First, we evaluated the history of published literature reviews on sanitation and diarrhea. Second, we conducted meta-analyses on studies from the most recent systematic review to uncover features that predict effectiveness. We found that 13 literature reviews dating to 1983 consistently estimated a significant protective effect of sanitation against diarrhea. However, these were marred by flawed studies and inappropriately averaged effects across widely heterogeneous interventions and contexts. Our meta-analyses highlight that the overall effect of sanitation on diarrhea was largely driven by sewerage and interventions that improved more than sanitation alone. There is no true overall effect of sanitation because variability between intervention types and implementation contexts is too complex to average. Ultimately, the null effects of recent latrine interventions are not surprising. Instead, the one trial that found a strong relative reduction in diarrhea is the historical outlier. The development of transformative sanitation interventions requires a better understanding of the social and environmental contexts that determine intervention effectiveness.Entities:
Keywords: WASH; diarrhea; diarrhoea; intervention; meta-analysis; sanitation; sewerage
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31905628 PMCID: PMC6981821 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17010230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
History of Literature Reviews on Sanitation and Diarrhea.
| Review | Scope of Review | Eligibility Criteria | Number of Studies on Sanitation and Diarrhea | Number of Studies Included in Overall Estimate | Overall Estimate of the Effect of Sanitation on Diarrhea | Conclusions | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blum and Feachem, 1983 [ | Studies on water supply and/or excreta disposal facilities and any health outcome | None | 14 studies on excreta disposal (alone or with water supply) and diarrhea | N/A | N/A | Severe methodological limitations in almost all studies raises doubts to the validity of their conclusions | Water supply and excreta disposal were not assessed separately; a health recall period greater than 48 h was considered a methodology problem |
| Esrey and Habicht, 1986 [ | Effect of water and sanitation interventions on diarrhea, infection, nutritional status, and childhood mortality | Any study that compared groups with different water and/or sanitation conditions | 8 studies on sanitation and water together; 23 other studies on sanitation and some health outcome; 3 studies confirmed to measure sanitation and diarrhea morbidity | N/A | N/A | Sanitation interventions can improve child health, especially when tailored to local communities | Did not clearly distinguish between studies on different health outcomes |
| Esrey et al. 1991 [ | Effect of drinking water and sanitation interventions on diarrhea, nutritional status, mortality, and various infections | Studies published after the previous review (1986) | 30 studies on sanitation alone; 18 “rigorous” studies did not have severe flaws | 11 for all studies; 5 for “rigorous” studies (studies not identified in text) | Median effect of all 11 studies: 22% reduction | Despite the poor quality of existing studies, it can be inferred that sanitation improvements lead to better health | The authors do not indicate which studies were “rigorous”, and it is not clear from reviewing the references separately |
| Fewtrell et al. 2005 [ | First systematic review of water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions on diarrhea | Studies that measured the effect of a water, sanitation, hygiene, or combined intervention | 4 eligible studies | 2 [ | 32% reduction (RR = 0.68, 95% CI 0.53, 0.87) | Sanitation interventions are effective at reducing diarrhea, although the evidence is limited | The two studies used to calculate an overall effect were (i) a sanitation and water supply intervention and their effects on cholera and (ii) a hospital-based case-control study; the two studies not used for the estimate are not identified in the study |
| Waddington et al. 2009 [ | Update to Fewtrell et al. 2005 | RCTs or studies employing quasi-experimental designs, including matched analysis of survey data | 6 studies; 3 high-quality studies | 6 studies [ | 37% reduction (Effect Size (ES) = 0.63, 95% CI 0.43, 0.93) | Sanitation interventions are highly effective at reducing diarrhea, but few studies have been conducted on the topic | The overall “effect estimate” did not attempt to convert effects from different studies to the same ratio (e.g., RR or OR) |
| Clasen et al. 2010 [ | Systematic review of sanitation interventions on diarrhea using the Cochrane methodology | Randomized, quasi-randomized, or non-randomized controlled trials | 13 studies; 7 in Chinese, 5 in English, 1 in French | N/A | N/A | The heterogeneity in type and quality of sanitation interventions is high and does not allow for estimation of an overall effect; but there is evidence that sanitation interventions prevent diarrhea | Confidence intervals were not extracted or reported from 11 studies due to insufficient number of clusters (e.g., a one-to-one village comparison); only point estimates were reported for those studies |
| Norman et al. 2010 [ | Systematic review on the effects of sewerage access on diarrhea and enteric infection | Any trial, cohort, case-control, or cross-sectional study | 25 total studies; 17 on diarrhea | 17 studies on diarrhea [ | 30% reduction (RR = 0.70, 95% CI 0.58, 0.85) | Sewerage is associated with reduced diarrhea in all age groups; confounding from observational studies is a potential issue, but sensitivity analyses suggest it is not a major limitation | Depends on observational studies, but the authors attempted to accounted for potential confounding through sensitivity analyses |
| Cairncross et al. 2010 [ | The impact of improved water quality, water quantity, and sanitation on diarrhea | First, intervention studies on sanitation and diarrhea | 4 quasi-randomized studies published in Chinese and 1 before and after sewerage study | N/A | No overall effect was calculated | The authors noted the consistency of diarrhea reductions found in various reviews of 36% (Esrey et al. 1991), 32% (Fewtrell et al. 2005), 20-51% (the median values of the four Chinese studies), and 22–43% (the one sewerage study, Barreto et al. 2007), although there is a serious lack of evidence on the subject | In finding no studies that fit their original criteria, the authors showed the striking lack of evidence on sanitation and diarrhea |
| Heijnen et al. 2014 [ | Comparison of shared sanitation vs. household latrine access on diarrhea, infection, enteric fevers, adverse birth outcomes, trachoma, and other fecal-oral diseases | Any study that compared health outcomes of populations using shared sanitation to those using household latrines | 9 studies with diarrhea as an outcome measure | 12 estimates from 6 studies [ | 44% increased odds of diarrhea when sharing sanitation | Those relying on shared sanitation are at higher risk of diarrhea and other health outcomes, although the conclusions are limited by methodological concerns, not knowing actual latrine use, and study heterogeneity | The authors acknowledged several limitations of their results, including that none of the studies followed an experimental design and not all studies adjusted for confounding. All studies were hospital- or clinic-based case-control studies |
| Wolf et al. 2014 [ | Impact of drinking water and sanitation interventions on diarrhea | RCTs, quasi-randomized and non-randomized control trials, observational studies when based on an intervention, time-series studies, and survey data with causal matching methods | 11 total studies; 2 sewerage studies | 11 for total effect; 9 for non-sewerage effect [ | All studies: 28% reduction (RR = 0.72, 95% CI 0.59, 0.88) | Sanitation interventions can lead to reductions in diarrhea | Mostly limited by underlying evidence |
| Jung et al. 2017 [ | Comparison of neighborhood and household sanitation access on diarrheal morbidity | Studies that estimated the association between sanitation at the household and/or neighborhood level and diarrhea; excluded studies that aggregated the effect of both levels | 22 total studies; 5 neighborhood level; 16 household level; 1 study measured both levels | 6 for the effect of neighborhood level; 17 for household level [ | Neighborhood Sanitation: 44% reduction (OR = 0.56, 95% CI 0.40, 0.79) | Both neighborhood level and household level sanitation are independently, and nearly equally, associated with reduced risk of diarrhea | This article reviewed mostly observational research, making it harder to compare to other reviews |
| Freeman et al. 2017 [ | The effect of sanitation interventions on diarrhea, various infections, and nutritional status | Excluded cross-sectional studies with no matching methods | 33 studies | 27 total studies; 16 intervention studies [ | All studies: 12% reduction (OR = 0.88, 95% CI 0.83, 0.92) | The studies reviewed were of low quality, but the results indicate an association between sanitation and diarrhea | Studies that went into the total estimate used a wider variety of study designs, including three hospital-based case-control studies |
| Wolf et al. 2018 [ | Update to Wolf et al. 2014 | RCTs, quasi-randomized and non-randomized control trials, observational studies when based on an intervention, time-series studies, and survey data with causal matching methods | 19 studies | 22 effect estimates from 19 total studies; 15 non-sewerage studies; 4 sewerage studies [ | All studies: 25% reduction (RR = 0.75, 95% CI 0.6, 0.88) | Evidence is limited, but sanitation is associated with reduced diarrhea, especially with high coverage | Only one coverage threshold was assessed |
Studies on Sanitation Interventions Included in Sub-Group Meta-Regression Analyses.
| Type of Intervention | Community Coverage | Community-Led Total Sanitation Model | Initiation of Sanitation Access | Effect on Diarrhea (95% CI) | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aziz et al. 1990 [ | Interventions of More Than Sanitation Alone | 92% | No | NA or Unknown | 0.74 (0.69, 0.80) | A community-based water, sanitation, and hygiene intervention was associated with a 26% reduction in diarrheal disease in children in rural Bangladesh. |
| Begum et al. 2011 [ | None: Analysis of National Survey or DHS Data | Not Reported | No | Household | 0.85 (0.63, 1.13) | An analysis of DHS and MICS survey data from Bangladesh found that sanitation had no association with diarrheal disease in children, unless the household had both improved sanitation and improved water access. |
| Bose 2009 [ | None: Analysis of National Survey or DHS Data | Not Reported | No | Household | 0.64 (0.45, 0.89) | A propensity score matched analysis of DHS data from 2006 in Nepal found that access to improved sanitation reduced childhood diarrhea by 46%. |
| Briceño et al. 2015 [ | Latrine Intervention | 56% | Yes | Household | 0.99 (0.75, 1.30) | An RCT of a large-scale, government-led, community-based handwashing and sanitation campaign found no effect on diarrhea in rural Tanzania. There was a statistically significant reduction in diarrhea only among communities that received both interventions, and only at the 10% confidence level. |
| Capuno et al. 2012 [ | None: Analysis of National Survey or DHS Data | Not Reported | No | Household | 1993: 0.85 (0.62, 1.15) | A propensity score analysis of four years of DHS data in the Philippines reported a 10 percentage point decrease in diarrheal incidence associated with access to a flush toilet. But this value is the maximum difference in one of the four years (2008) from six different matching methods. It is not clear which matching method was recorded for Wolf et al. (2018). |
| Clasen et al. 2014 [ | Latrine Intervention | 38% | No | Study | 0.97 (0.84, 1.13) | An RCT of a community-based sanitation promotion and construction intervention found no association with diarrheal disease in Odisha (Orissa), India. |
| Fan and Mahal 2011 [ | None: Analysis of National Survey or DHS Data | Not Reported | No | Household | 1.07 (0.88, 1.29) | Several matched analyses were conducted using 1994 survey data from India. Improved toilets were associated with an 8.5 percentage point reduction in diarrhea using exact matching, but no association was found using two other matching methods. |
| Garrett et al. 2008 [ | Interventions of More Than Sanitation Alone | 49% | No | Household | 0.31 (0.23, 0.41) | A village-level RCT on a combined water access, water treatment, latrine promotion, and behavior change intervention found that living in an intervention village was associated with a 69% reduction in diarrhea. This is the value reported by Wolf et. al., but includes all of the interventions together. Latrine presence was independently associated with diarrhea (RR = 0.71, 95% CI 0.54, 0.92). |
| Godfrey et al. 2014 [ | Latrine Intervention | 62% | Yes | Household | 0.54 (0.29, 1.01) | An RCT was implemented to test the effect of a large-scale government WASH program in Mozambique (The One Million Initiative). A water intervention, a CLTS intervention, and a water + CLTS intervention group were compared to controls. Controls were from districts where the government had begun implementing the intervention, but it was not implemented in the control communities themselves. The intervention was implemented in communities and in schools. |
| Khush and London 2009 [ | Interventions of More Than Sanitation Alone | 57% | No | Household | 1.00 (0.43, 2.32) | A non-randomized CLTS and drinking water improvement campaign in India did not result in changes to diarrheal disease, but the prevalence of diarrhea in all groups was low (2%). |
| Klasen et al. 2012 [ | Sewerage Intervention | 85% | No | NA or Unknown | 0.81 (0.35, 1.90) | The effect of extending access to piped water and sewerage in urban Yemen was estimated in two regions: a costal region and a mountain region. Diarrheal risk increased in the mountain region after the intervention, while risk decreased in the coastal region. The intervention is a drinking water and sewerage intervention, compared to a control group that only received the drinking water intervention. |
| Kumar and Vollmer 2012 [ | None: Analysis of National Survey or DHS Data | Not Reported | No | Household | 0.82 (0.79 0.85) | A propensity score analysis of survey data in India found no effect of improved sanitation among low- and middle-income households or for girls; there were effects for high income households and boys. The statistically significant effects are each 2–3 percentage point reductions. |
| Messou et al. 1997 [ | Interventions of More Than Sanitation Alone | Not Reported | No | NA or Unknown | 0.71 (0.56, 0.92) | Study was published in French. The intervention was a shared (public) double pit latrine, designed to be shared by 10 people, along with improved water supply, hygiene promotion, and oral hydration therapy (this information was extracted from Clasen et al. 2010) |
| Moraes et al. 2003 [ | Sewerage Intervention | 91% | No | NA or Unknown | 0.31 (0.28, 0.34) | Neighborhoods that received government expanded sewerage access had almost 70% fewer episodes of diarrhea compared to control neighborhoods. Analysis was adjusted for child′s age, gender and birth order, number of children aged < 5 years in the household, crowding, mother′s education, monthly per capita income, exclusive use of kitchen, animals in the house, presence of a washstand, water usage and house floor material. |
| Patil et al. 2014 [ | Latrine Intervention | 41% | Yes | Household | 0.97 (0.78, 1.22) | An RCT of a community-based sanitation intervention (TSC) in rural India found no health benefits, including diarrheal disease. |
| Pickering et al. 2015 [ | Latrine Intervention | 65% | Yes | Household | 0.93 (0.76, 1.14) | An RCT of a community-based sanitation intervention (CLTS) in rural Mali found no differences between intervention and control villages on diarrheal disease. Intervention children were taller and less likely to be stunted. |
| Pradhan and Rawlings 2002 [ | Sewerage Intervention | 100% | No | NA or Unknown | 0.43 (0.11, 1.71) | An analysis of a multi-faceted social investment project in Nicaragua found no association between sewerage promotion and diarrhea in children under six. Not all households in the intervention area were connected to the sewer network. There were only 23 children under six in the intervention group; two of the 23 were reported to have diarrhea. |
| Roushdy et al. 2012 [ | None: Analysis of National Survey or DHS Data | 63% | No | Household | 1.42 (0.76, 2.68) | An analysis of DHS data from 2008 in Egypt found that improved sanitation had a positive, non-significant association with diarrheal disease in children. |
| Walker et al. 1999 [ | Latrine Intervention | 90% | No | NA or Unknown | 0.65 (0.47, 0.90) | This study evaluated a mostly World Bank/Honduran government funded social investment project in Honduras in the 1990s. Municipalities were offered projects from a “menu” of options. It is not clear if municipalities chose only one project or any projects that could be afforded by their allotted budget. |
| Humphrey et al. 2019 [ | Interventions of More Than Sanitation Alone | Not Reported | No | Study | 1.18 (0.87, 1.61) | The Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy (SHINE) trial was a randomized controlled trial of a combined water, sanitation (construction of a ventilated improved pit latrine), and hygiene intervention. The intervention had no effect on diarrhea in children. |
| Luby et al. 2018 [ | Latrine Intervention | Not Reported | No | Study | 0.61 (0.46, 0.81) | The WASH-Benefits-Bangladesh trial was a randomized controlled trial that included a sanitation arm (compound level pour flush latrine construction). The sanitation intervention led to a reduction in diarrhea in children, from 5.7% to 3.5% using one-week recall. |
| Null et al. 2018 [ | Latrine Intervention | Not Reported | No | Study | 0.99 (0.88, 1.10) | The WASH-Benefits-Kenya trial was a randomized controlled trial that included a sanitation arm (compound level improved latrines). The intervention had no effect on diarrhea in children. |
Results of Subgroup Meta-Regression Models.
| Model | Risk Ratio (95% CI) | Number of Studies Included (Number of Estimates) |
|---|---|---|
| All Studies | 0.80 (0.67, 0.92) | 22 (25) |
|
| ||
| Latrine interventions | 0.90 (0.67, 1.12) | 8 (8) |
| Interventions on more than sanitation alone | 0.74 (0.46, 1.02) | 5 (5) |
| Sewerage interventions | 0.36 (0.00, 0.76) | 3 (3) |
| No Intervention: National survey or DHS analysis | 0.85 (0.66, 1.04) | 6 (9) |
|
| ||
| Community-led total sanitation studies | 0.91 (0.55, 1.28) | 4 (4) |
| Household-initiated WASH access 1 | 0.84 (0.68, 1.00) | 12 (15) |
| Study-initiated interventions 2 | 0.95 (0.67, 1.24) | 4 (4) |
1 Includes studies in which the household chose to obtain access without direct contact from a study team, including some sanitation promotion interventions and cross-sectional surveys. 2 Includes studies in which households were asked to participate knowing that a latrine would be constructed if they agreed.
Figure 1Forest plot of sanitation studies included in meta-analysis by intervention type. Effect estimate and 95% confidence intervals are plotted for each study (purple) and for the pooled estimate of four intervention types (green). The four intervention types are latrine interventions (Latrine Interventions), no intervention: causal analyses of national survey data (Survey Analyses), interventions that improved more than sanitation alone (Sanitation + Interventions), and interventions on sewerage access (Sewerage Interventions).
Effect Modification by Sanitation Coverage.
| Model | Risk Ratio (95% CI) | Number of Studies Included |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Under 60% Coverage | 0.85 (0.54, 1.17) | 5 |
| Over 60% Coverage | 0.65 (0.42, 0.88) | 8 |
| Under 75% Coverage | 0.88 (0.61, 1.15) | 8 |
| Over 75% Coverage | 0.56 (0.30, 0.82) | 5 |
| Under 90% Coverage | 0.88 (0.62, 1.14) | 9 |
| Over 90% Coverage | 0.55 (0.28, 0.82) | 4 |
|
| ||
| Under 60% Coverage | 0.85 (0.54, 1.17) | 5 |
| Over 60% Coverage | 0.80 (0.51, 1.08) | 5 |
| Under 75% Coverage 1 | 0.88 (0.61, 1.15) | 8 |
| Over 90% Coverage 1 | 0.72 (0.37, 1.07) | 2 |
1 The two non-sewerage studies that reached 75% coverage also reached over 90% coverage, so the 75% threshold could not be assessed separately for these studies.
Figure 2Forest plot of sanitation studies by community coverage with the intervention for (top) all studies and (bottom) non-sewerage studies. Effect estimate and 95% confidence intervals are plotted for three coverage thresholds: 60% (green), 75% (blue), and 90% (purple). No non-sewerage studies reached coverage between 75% and 90%.