| Literature DB >> 32357929 |
Owen Nkoka1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Management of children's stools is an important aspect of achieving open defecation free communities and reduction of diarrhea. However, information regarding individual- and community- level factors associated with safe child stool disposal in Malawi is limited. The current study aimed to assess the prevalence of safe child stool disposal and the associated individual- and community- level factors in Malawi.Entities:
Keywords: Malawi; Multilevel analysis; Safe stool disposal
Year: 2020 PMID: 32357929 PMCID: PMC7195806 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-08725-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Measurement of individual- and community-level variables
| Individual-level factors | Description |
|---|---|
| Sex of the child | Male, Female |
| Age of the child (months) | ≤ 5, 6–11, 12–17, 18–23 |
| Maternal age (years) | 15–24, 25–34, ≥35 |
| Number of children ever had | 1, 2, 3, 4+ |
| Maternal educational level | No formal education, primary, secondary and higher |
| Wealth | The MDHS uses principal component analysis to score household items to calculate wealth. The scores are categorized into quintiles from poorest to richest. In this study, richest and rich were grouped as “rich” (upper 40%), middle remained the same (middle 20%), and poorest and poor were grouped as “poor” (lower 40%). |
| Employed | No, yes |
| Media exposure | No, Yes (Composite variable categorizing those that reported listening to radio, reading newspaper or watching television at least one a week as “yes” otherwise as “no”) |
| Religion | Catholics, protestants, Muslims and others |
| Water source | Unimproved, improved (Improved water source included piped water, boreholes or tube-wells, protected dug wells, protected springs, rainwater, and packaged or delivered water) |
| Sanitation type | Unimproved, improved (improved included flush toilets, piped sewer system, septic tank, flush/pour flush to pit latrine, ventilated improved pit latrine, pit latrine with slab, and composting toilet) |
| Residence | Urban, rural |
| Region | Northern, Central, Southern |
| Community wealth | Aggregated from individual-level wealth index defined as the proportion of women who were coming from rich households. The resultant score was categorized using tertiles as low, middle, high. |
| Community education | Aggregated from individual-level maternal educational level defined as the proportion of women who had primary or above education. The resultant score was categorized using tertiles as low, middle, high. |
Prevalence of children’s stool disposal in Malawi stratified by age
| Stool disposal manner | Child age category | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 6 mo. | 6–11 mo. | 12–17 mo. | 18–23 mo. | ||
| Used toilet/ latrine | 48 (3.0) | 40 (2.4) | 46 (2.9) | 79 (5.3) | 213 (3.4) |
| Put/rinsed in toilet or latrine | 1057 (65.9) | 1351 (82.2) | 1405 (88.1) | 1262 (85.1) | 5075 (80.2) |
| Put/rinsed in drain | 268 (16.7) | 121 (7.4) | 62 (3.9) | 51 (3.4) | 502 (7.9) |
| Throw in garbage | 120 (7.5) | 57 (3.5) | 31 (1.9) | 46 (3.1) | 254 (4.0) |
| Buried | 27 (1.6) | 31 (1.9) | 32 (2.0) | 36 (2.4) | 126 (2.0) |
| Left in open or not disposed | 69 (4.3) | 35 (2.1) | 17 (1.1) | 9 (0.6) | 130 (2.1) |
| Other | 16 (1.0) | 8 (0.5) | 2 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) | 26 (0.4) |
a Weighted frequency, b weighted percentage
Distribution of study characteristics according to whether child’s stools were safely disposed of: results from Chi-square test
| Variable | Safe child stool disposal ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No ( | Yes ( | ||
| Sex of the child | 0.424 | ||
| Male | 447 (14.0) | 2739 (86.0) | |
| Female | 466 (14.9) | 2674 (85.1) | |
| Age of the child (months) | |||
| ≤ 5 | 473 (29.5) | 1132 (70.5) | |
| 6–11 | 221 (13.5) | 1422 (86.5) | |
| 12–17 | 113 (7.1) | 1483 (92.9) | |
| 18–23 | 106 (7.1) | 1376 (92.9) | |
| Maternal age (years) | 0.356 | ||
| 15–24 | 430 (14.9) | 2451 (85.1) | |
| 25–34 | 333 (13.5) | 2133 (86.5) | |
| ≥ 35 | 150 (15.3) | 829 (84.7) | |
| Number of children ever had | 0.195 | ||
| 1 | 231 (13.7) | 1456 (86.3) | |
| 2 | 169 (13.0) | 1138 (87.0) | |
| 3 | 145 (14.5) | 854 (85.5) | |
| 4+ | 368 (15.8) | 1965 (84.2) | |
| Maternal educational level | |||
| No formal education | 132 (17.4) | 628 (82.6) | |
| Primary | 645 (15.2) | 3603 (84.8) | |
| Secondary and higher | 136 (10.3) | 1182 (89.7) | |
| Wealth | |||
| Poor | 538 (17.6) | 2519 (82.4) | |
| Middle | 161 (13.1) | 1072 (86.9) | |
| Rich | 214 (10.5) | 1822 (89.5) | |
| Employed | 0.259 | ||
| No | 273 (13.4) | 1763 (86.6) | |
| Yes | 640 (14.9) | 3650 (85.1) | |
| Media exposure | |||
| No | 646 (15.4) | 3556 (84.6) | |
| Yes | 267 (12.5) | 1857 (87.5) | |
| Religion | 0.673 | ||
| Catholics | 183 (15.7) | 984 (84.3) | |
| Protestants | 184 (14.1) | 119 (85.9) | |
| Muslims and others | 546 (14.2) | 3310 (85.8) | |
| Water source | |||
| Unimproved | 161 (18.4) | 712 (81.6) | |
| Improved | 752 (13.8) | 4701 (86.2) | |
| Sanitation type | |||
| Unimproved | 215 (18.9) | 924 (81.1) | |
| Improved | 698 (13.4) | 4489 (86.6) | |
| Residence | |||
| Urban | 63 (7.4) | 796 (92.6) | |
| Rural | 850 (15.5) | 4617 (84.5) | |
| Region | 0.298 | ||
| Northern | 124 (17.1) | 601 (82.9) | |
| Central | 375 (14.1) | 2286 (85.9) | |
| Southern | 414 (14.1) | 2526 (85.9) | |
| Community wealth | |||
| Low | 349 (16.2) | 1802 (83.8) | |
| Middle | 353 (15.6) | 1910 (84.4) | |
| High | 211 (11.0) | 1701 (89.0) | |
| Community education | |||
| Low | 415 (18.0) | 1883 (82.0) | |
| Middle | 118 (11.2) | 938 (88.8) | |
| High | 380 (12.8) | 2592 (87.2) | |
Bold means p-value< 0.05, all p-values from Pearson’s chi-square test, a Weighted frequency, b weighted percentage
Multilevel logistic analysis of factors associated with safe stool disposal
| Variable | Null model | Model I | Model II | Model III |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex of the child | ||||
| Male | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Female | 0.93 (0.79–1.08 | |||
| Age of the child (months) | ||||
| ≤ 5 | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| 6–11 | ||||
| 12–17 | ||||
| 18–23 | ||||
| Maternal age (years) | ||||
| 15–24 | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| 25–34 | 1.09 (0.84–1.41) | 1.07 (0.83–1.38) | ||
| ≥ 35 | 0.98 (0.69–1.38) | 0.94 (0.67–1.33) | ||
| Number of children ever had | ||||
| 1 | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| 2 | 1.19 (0.94–1.08) | 1.20 (0.95–1.53) | ||
| 3 | 0.87 (0.65–1.16) | 0.89 (0.67–1.19) | ||
| 4+ | 0.91 (0.65–1.26) | 0.94 (0.68–1.31) | ||
| Maternal educational level | ||||
| No formal education | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Primary | 0.91 (0.71–1.17) | 0.83 (0.64–1.08) | ||
| Secondary and higher | 1.15 (0.83–1.60) | 1.02 (0.73–1.62) | ||
| Wealth | ||||
| Poor | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Middle | 1.24 (0.99–1.53) | |||
| Rich | ||||
| Employed | ||||
| No | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Yes | 0.90 (0.76–1.08) | 0.89 (0.75–1.06) | ||
| Media exposure | ||||
| No | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Yes | ||||
| Religion | ||||
| Catholics | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Protestant | 0.96 (0.74–1.24) | 0.97 (0.75–1.25) | ||
| Muslims and others | 0.94 (0.76–1.16) | 0.95 (0.77–1.17) | ||
| Water source | ||||
| Unimproved | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Improved | 1.23 (0.98–1.55) | |||
| Sanitation type | ||||
| Unimproved | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Improved | ||||
| Residence | ||||
| Urban | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Rural | 0.73 (0.52–1.65) | |||
| Region | ||||
| Northern | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Central | ||||
| Southern | ||||
| Community wealth | ||||
| Low | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Middle | 1.08 (0.86–1.36) | 1.05 (0.82–1.34) | ||
| High | 1.17 (0.85–1.54) | 0.97 (0.71–1.84) | ||
| Community women’s education | ||||
| Low | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Middle | ||||
| High | ||||
| Measures of variation | ||||
| Area variance (95% CI) | 0.66 (0.49–0.90) | 0.70 (0.51–0.96) | 0.57 (0.41–0.79) | 0.63 (0.45–0.88) |
| ICC (%) | 16.8 | 17.6 | 14.8 | 16.1 |
| PCV (%) | Ref. | −6.06 | 13.6 | 4.6 |
| MOR | 2.18 | 2.22 | 2.06 | 2.14 |
| Model Fit statistic | ||||
| AIC | 5309.53 | 4848.50 | 5278.58 | 4831.51 |
Null model contains no explanatory variables; Model I includes individual-level factors only; Model II includes community-level factors only; Model III includes both individual-level and community-level factors
aOR adjusted odds ratio, CI confidence internal, ICC intraclass correlation coefficient, MOR median odds ratio, PVC proportional change in variance, AIC Akaike information criterion