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Is pregnancy a teachable moment to promote handwashing with soap among primiparous women in rural Bangladesh? Follow‐up of a randomised controlled trial
Author(s) -
Kamm Kelly B.,
Vujcic Jelena,
Nasreen Sharifa,
Luby Stephen P.,
Zaman K.,
El Arifeen Shams,
Ram Pavani K.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
tropical medicine and international health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.056
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1365-3156
pISSN - 1360-2276
DOI - 10.1111/tmi.12782
Subject(s) - teachable moment , medicine , obstetrics , pregnancy , randomized controlled trial , environmental health , gynecology , surgery , psychology , genetics , psychoanalysis , biology
Objective Promoting handwashing with soap to mothers of young children can significantly reduce diarrhoea and pneumonia morbidity among children, but studies that measured long‐term behaviour after interventions rarely found improvements in handwashing habits. Expecting mothers may experience emotional and social changes that create a unique environment that may encourage adoption of improved handwashing habits. The objective of this study was to determine whether exposure to an intensive handwashing intervention in the perinatal period (perinatal arm) was associated with improved maternal handwashing behaviour vs . exposure to the same intervention after the end of the perinatal period (post‐neonatal arm). Methods We identified primiparous women previously enrolled a randomised controlled handwashing intervention trial (November 2010–December 2011) and observed handwashing behaviours at the home 1–14 months after completion of the RCT (January–May 2012). We observed maternal handwashing and estimated the prevalence ratio ( PR ) of maternal handwashing using log‐binomial regression. Results We enrolled 107 mothers in the perinatal arm and 105 mothers in the post‐neonatal arm. Handwashing with soap at recommended times was low overall (4.6%) and comparable between arms ( PR = 0.9, 95% CI 0.5, 1.5). Conclusions This handwashing intervention was unable to develop and establish improved handwashing practices in primiparous women in rural Bangladesh. While pregnancy may present an opportunity and motivation to do so, further studies should assess whether social, individual and environmental influences overcome this motivation and prevent handwashing with soap among new mothers.