Do Sanitation Improvements Reduce Fecal Contamination of Water, Hands, Food, Soil, and Flies? Evidence from a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural Bangladesh
Author(s) -
Ayşe Ercümen,
Amy J. Pickering,
Laura H. Kwong,
Andrew Mertens,
Benjamin F. Arnold,
Jade BenjaminChung,
Alan Hubbard,
Mahfuja Alam,
Debashis Sen,
Sharmin Islam,
Md. Zahidur Rahman,
Craig Phillip Kullmann,
Claire Chase,
Rokeya Ahmed,
Sarker Masud Parvez,
Leanne Unicomb,
Mahbubur Rahman,
Pavani K. Ram,
Thomas Clasen,
Stephen P. Luby,
John M. Colford
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.8b02988
Subject(s) - sanitation , feces , contamination , environmental science , fecal coliform , cluster (spacecraft) , environmental health , cluster randomised controlled trial , randomized controlled trial , toxicology , water resource management , environmental engineering , biology , medicine , ecology , water quality , surgery , computer science , programming language
Sanitation improvements have had limited effectiveness in reducing the spread of fecal pathogens into the environment. We conducted environmental measurements within a randomized controlled trial in Bangladesh that implemented individual and combined water treatment, sanitation, handwashing (WSH) and nutrition interventions (WASH Benefits, NCT01590095). Following approximately 4 months of intervention, we enrolled households in the trial's control, sanitation and combined WSH arms to assess whether sanitation improvements, alone and coupled with water treatment and handwashing, reduce fecal contamination in the domestic environment. We quantified fecal indicator bacteria in samples of drinking and ambient waters, child hands, food given to young children, courtyard soil and flies. In the WSH arm, Escherichia coli prevalence in stored drinking water was reduced by 62% (prevalence ratio = 0.38 (0.32, 0.44)) and E. coli concentration by 1-log (Δlog 10 = -0.88 (-1.01, -0.75)). The interventions did not reduce E. coli along other sampled pathways. Ambient contamination remained high among intervention households. Potential reasons include noncommunity-level sanitation coverage, child open defecation, animal fecal sources, or naturalized E. coli in the environment. Future studies should explore potential threshold effects of different levels of community sanitation coverage on environmental contamination.
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