Cargando…

Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh

BACKGROUND: Uptake matters for evaluating the health impact of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions. Many large-scale WASH interventions have been plagued by low uptake. For the WASH Benefits Bangladesh efficacy trial, high uptake was a prerequisite. We assessed the degree of technolog...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Parvez, Sarker Masud, Azad, Rashidul, Rahman, Mahbubur, Unicomb, Leanne, Ram, Pavani K., Naser, Abu Mohd, Stewart, Christine P., Jannat, Kaniz, Rahman, Musarrat Jabeen, Leontsini, Elli, Winch, Peter J., Luby, Stephen P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6034207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29976251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-018-2710-8
_version_ 1783337831105560576
author Parvez, Sarker Masud
Azad, Rashidul
Rahman, Mahbubur
Unicomb, Leanne
Ram, Pavani K.
Naser, Abu Mohd
Stewart, Christine P.
Jannat, Kaniz
Rahman, Musarrat Jabeen
Leontsini, Elli
Winch, Peter J.
Luby, Stephen P.
author_facet Parvez, Sarker Masud
Azad, Rashidul
Rahman, Mahbubur
Unicomb, Leanne
Ram, Pavani K.
Naser, Abu Mohd
Stewart, Christine P.
Jannat, Kaniz
Rahman, Musarrat Jabeen
Leontsini, Elli
Winch, Peter J.
Luby, Stephen P.
author_sort Parvez, Sarker Masud
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Uptake matters for evaluating the health impact of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions. Many large-scale WASH interventions have been plagued by low uptake. For the WASH Benefits Bangladesh efficacy trial, high uptake was a prerequisite. We assessed the degree of technology and behavioral uptake among participants in the trial, as part of a three-paper series on WASH Benefits Intervention Delivery and Performance. METHODS: This study is a cluster randomized trial comprised of geographically matched clusters among four districts in rural Bangladesh. We randomly allocated 720 clusters of 5551 pregnant women to individual or combined water, sanitation, handwashing, and nutrition interventions, or a control group. Behavioral objectives included; drinking chlorine-treated, safely stored water; use of a hygienic latrine and safe feces disposal at the compound level; handwashing with soap at key times; and age-appropriate nutrition behaviors (pregnancy to 24 months) including a lipid-based nutrition supplement (LNS). Enabling technologies and behavior change were promoted by trained local community health workers through periodic household visits. To monitor technology and behavioral uptake, we conducted surveys and spot checks in 30–35 households per intervention arm per month, over a 20-month period, and structured observations in 324 intervention and 108 control households, approximately 15 months after interventions commenced. RESULTS: In the sanitation arms, observed adult use of a hygienic latrine was high (94–97% of events) while child sanitation practices were moderate (37–54%). In the handwashing arms, handwashing with soap was more common after toilet use (67–74%) than nonintervention arms (18–40%), and after cleaning a child’s anus (61–72%), but was still low before food handling. In the water intervention arms, more than 65% of mothers and index children were observed drinking chlorine-treated water from a safe container. Reported LNS feeding was > 80% in nutrition arms. There was little difference in uptake between single and combined intervention arms. CONCLUSIONS: Rigorous implementation of interventions deployed at large scale in the context of an efficacy trial achieved high levels of technology and behavioral uptake in individual and combined WASH and nutrition intervention households. Further work should assess how to achieve similar uptake levels under programmatic conditions. TRIAL REGISTRATION: WASH Benefits Bangladesh: ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT01590095. Registered on April 30, 2012.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6034207
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60342072018-07-12 Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh Parvez, Sarker Masud Azad, Rashidul Rahman, Mahbubur Unicomb, Leanne Ram, Pavani K. Naser, Abu Mohd Stewart, Christine P. Jannat, Kaniz Rahman, Musarrat Jabeen Leontsini, Elli Winch, Peter J. Luby, Stephen P. Trials Research BACKGROUND: Uptake matters for evaluating the health impact of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions. Many large-scale WASH interventions have been plagued by low uptake. For the WASH Benefits Bangladesh efficacy trial, high uptake was a prerequisite. We assessed the degree of technology and behavioral uptake among participants in the trial, as part of a three-paper series on WASH Benefits Intervention Delivery and Performance. METHODS: This study is a cluster randomized trial comprised of geographically matched clusters among four districts in rural Bangladesh. We randomly allocated 720 clusters of 5551 pregnant women to individual or combined water, sanitation, handwashing, and nutrition interventions, or a control group. Behavioral objectives included; drinking chlorine-treated, safely stored water; use of a hygienic latrine and safe feces disposal at the compound level; handwashing with soap at key times; and age-appropriate nutrition behaviors (pregnancy to 24 months) including a lipid-based nutrition supplement (LNS). Enabling technologies and behavior change were promoted by trained local community health workers through periodic household visits. To monitor technology and behavioral uptake, we conducted surveys and spot checks in 30–35 households per intervention arm per month, over a 20-month period, and structured observations in 324 intervention and 108 control households, approximately 15 months after interventions commenced. RESULTS: In the sanitation arms, observed adult use of a hygienic latrine was high (94–97% of events) while child sanitation practices were moderate (37–54%). In the handwashing arms, handwashing with soap was more common after toilet use (67–74%) than nonintervention arms (18–40%), and after cleaning a child’s anus (61–72%), but was still low before food handling. In the water intervention arms, more than 65% of mothers and index children were observed drinking chlorine-treated water from a safe container. Reported LNS feeding was > 80% in nutrition arms. There was little difference in uptake between single and combined intervention arms. CONCLUSIONS: Rigorous implementation of interventions deployed at large scale in the context of an efficacy trial achieved high levels of technology and behavioral uptake in individual and combined WASH and nutrition intervention households. Further work should assess how to achieve similar uptake levels under programmatic conditions. TRIAL REGISTRATION: WASH Benefits Bangladesh: ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT01590095. Registered on April 30, 2012. BioMed Central 2018-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6034207/ /pubmed/29976251 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-018-2710-8 Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Parvez, Sarker Masud
Azad, Rashidul
Rahman, Mahbubur
Unicomb, Leanne
Ram, Pavani K.
Naser, Abu Mohd
Stewart, Christine P.
Jannat, Kaniz
Rahman, Musarrat Jabeen
Leontsini, Elli
Winch, Peter J.
Luby, Stephen P.
Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh
title Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh
title_full Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh
title_fullStr Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh
title_short Achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (WASH benefits) in rural Bangladesh
title_sort achieving optimal technology and behavioral uptake of single and combined interventions of water, sanitation hygiene and nutrition, in an efficacy trial (wash benefits) in rural bangladesh
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6034207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29976251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-018-2710-8
work_keys_str_mv AT parvezsarkermasud achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT azadrashidul achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT rahmanmahbubur achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT unicombleanne achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT rampavanik achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT naserabumohd achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT stewartchristinep achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT jannatkaniz achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT rahmanmusarratjabeen achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT leontsinielli achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT winchpeterj achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh
AT lubystephenp achievingoptimaltechnologyandbehavioraluptakeofsingleandcombinedinterventionsofwatersanitationhygieneandnutritioninanefficacytrialwashbenefitsinruralbangladesh