人人享有水、环境卫生和个人卫生干预研究:前后对照试验方案。

IF 1.4 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Kondwani Chidziwisano, Mindy Panulo, Clara MacLeod, Marcella Vigneri, Blessings White, Joseph Wells, Ian Ross, Tracy Morse, Robert Dreibelbis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:基于社区的行为改变干预措施是水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)的常用方法。然而,发表的关于这些干预措施如何在全区范围内发挥作用的评估很少。目的:本研究报告了一项试验的基线特征和研究设计,该试验评估了马拉维Chiradzulu地区社区主导的全面卫生(CLTS)干预措施与当地护理小组(CG)在卫生设施覆盖、使用和卫生行为方面的额外整合的有效性。方法:本研究采用前后对照试验,分为2个治疗组和1个对照组。集群指的是3个传统当局(ta)的农村。一只手臂接受CLTS和CG模型(CLTS+CG组),一只手臂只接受CLTS (CLTS组),另一组作为对照组。该试验是马拉维世界宣明会领导的更广泛的人人享有WASH项目(W4E)的一部分,该项目旨在到2025年在整个地区扩大获得WASH服务的机会。研究参与者从3个助教中选出。采用系统抽样方法,每组抽取20户,基线和终点共1400户。主要成果是卫生设施的覆盖。次要结局指标包括卫生设施的使用、儿童粪便的安全处理、观察到的洗手设施以及与卫生相关的生活质量指数(SanQoL-5)。结果:基线观察表明,试验组中潜在的人口混杂因素分布平衡,在一些WASH代理措施上有轻微变化。我们注意到,在所有三个组中,使用肥皂和水洗手设施的覆盖率都很低:CLTS组为8%,CLTS+CG组为4%,对照组为4%。在各研究组中,洗手习惯存在边际差异,CLTS组中有3%的人用肥皂和水洗手,CLTS+CG组中有5%,对照组中有2%。基线时,各研究组的卫生设施覆盖率也各不相同,CLTS组83%的家庭享有未经改善的卫生设施,CLTS+CG组为70%,对照组为81%。结论:该试验的结果将提供证据,证明与单独使用CLTS而不进行干预相比,CLTS+CG方法在改善W4E项目地区的环境卫生和个人卫生习惯方面是否有效,并为马拉维Chiradzulu地区未来的干预措施提供信息。研究结果预计将于2025年公布。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05808218;https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05808218.International注册报表标识符(irrid): RR1-10.2196/68280。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene for Everyone Intervention Study: Protocol for a Controlled Before-and-After Trial.

Background: Community-based behavior change interventions are a common approach to Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH). Yet, published evaluations of how these interventions work in district-wide approaches are rare.

Objective: This study reports the baseline characteristics and study design for a trial assessing the effectiveness of a district-level Community-led Total Sanitation (CLTS) intervention compared to the additional integration of local care groups (CG) on sanitation coverage and use and hygiene behaviors in Chiradzulu District, Malawi.

Methods: This study is a controlled before-and-after trial with 2 treatment arms and a control group. Clusters are rural villages in 3 traditional authorities (TAs). One arm will receive CLTS and the CG model (CLTS+CG group), one arm CLTS only (CLTS group), and one group will serve as the control. The trial is part of the wider WASH for Everyone (W4E) project, led by World Vision Malawi that aims to expand access to WASH services across the entire district by 2025. Study participants were selected from the 3 TAs. Systematic sampling procedures were used to select 20 households per cluster with a total of 1400 households at both baseline and end line. The primary outcome is sanitation coverage. Secondary outcome measures include sanitation use, safe disposal of child feces, observed handwashing facility, and Sanitation-related Quality of Life Index (SanQoL-5).

Results: The baseline observations indicate a balanced distribution of potential demographic confounders in the trial arms with a slight variation on some WASH proxy measures. We noted the low coverage of handwashing facilities with soap and water in all 3 arms: 8% in the CLTS group, 4% in the CLTS+CG group, and 4% in the control group. There was a marginal variation in handwashing practices among the study arms with 3% of individuals handwashing with soap and water in the CLTS group, 5% in the CLTS+CG group, and 2% in the control group. Sanitation coverage also varied among the study arms at baseline as 83% of households had access to unimproved sanitation in the CLTS group, 70% in the CLTS+CG group, and 81% in the control group.

Conclusions: Results from this trial will provide evidence on whether the CLTS+CG approach is effective at improving sanitation and hygiene practices in the W4E program area compared to CLTS alone and no intervention, as well as inform implementing partners on future interventions in Chiradzulu District, Malawi. The results are expected to be published in 2025.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05808218; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05808218.

International registered report identifier (irrid): RR1-10.2196/68280.

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CiteScore
2.40
自引率
5.90%
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