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Home Hygiene Practices and Infectious Disease Symptoms Among Household Members
Author(s) -
Larson Elaine,
Duarte Cabilia Gomez
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
public health nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.471
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 1525-1446
pISSN - 0737-1209
DOI - 10.1046/j.1525-1446.2001.00116.x
Subject(s) - hygiene , medicine , environmental health , public health , population , transmission (telecommunications) , disease , logistic regression , laundry , infectious disease (medical specialty) , demography , gerontology , nursing , geography , pathology , sociology , electrical engineering , engineering , archaeology
Public health programs are generally targeted to communitywide, population‐based prevention strategies, with little attention focused on the home environment as one potential source of transmission of infectious diseases. The purpose of this correlational prevalence survey was to describe the relationship between home hygiene practices and prevalence of infectious disease symptoms among household members. Three hundred and ninety‐eight households with 1,662 members in an inner‐city population (96.4% Hispanic) were surveyed to examine hygiene practices and determine the presence of transmission of infection, defined as the presence of the same symptom(s) in two or more household members for which at least one individual sought medical attention and received treatment. At least one individual in 78.6% of households reported symptoms of infection in the previous 30 days, and 37.9% of households met the definition of disease transmission. In univariate analyses, five factors were significantly associated with risk of household transmission, but in the logistic regression model, only use of communal laundry ( p = 0.009) and lack of bleach use ( p = 0.04) were significantly predictive of increased risk of transmission. This is the first comprehensive survey of home hygiene practices and the first study to identify a potential link between laundry and risk of disease transmission in homes. This potential link warrants further study in clinical trials.