Impact of a School-Based Hygiene Promotion and Sanitation Intervention on Pupil Hand Contamination in Western Kenya: A Cluster Randomized Trial

Handwashing with soap effectively reduces exposure to diarrhea-causing pathogens. Interventions to improve hygiene and sanitation conditions in schools within low-income countries have gained increased attention; however, their impact on schoolchildren's exposure to fecal pathogens has not been established. Our trial examined whether a school-based water, sanitation, and hygiene intervention reduced Escherichia coli contamination on pupils' hands in western Kenya. A hygiene promotion and water treatment intervention did not reduce risk of E. coli presence (relative risk [RR] = 0.92, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.54–1.56); the addition of new latrines to intervention schools significantly increased risk among girls (RR = 2.63, 95% CI = 1.29–5.34), with a non-significant increase among boys (RR = 1.36, 95% CI = 0.74–2.49). Efforts to increase usage of school latrines by constructing new facilities may pose a risk to children in the absence of sufficient hygiene behavior change, daily provision of soap and water, and anal cleansing materials.

[1]  E. Lingaas,et al.  Development of a method to measure bacterial transfer from hands. , 2009, The Journal of hospital infection.

[2]  D. Mahalanabis,et al.  Post-defecation handwashing in Bangladesh: practice and efficiency perspectives. , 1995, Public health.

[3]  I. Nandrup-Bus,et al.  Mandatory handwashing in elementary schools reduces absenteeism due to infectious illness among pupils: a pilot intervention study. , 2009, American journal of infection control.

[4]  B. Brumback,et al.  Assessing the impact of a school‐based water treatment, hygiene and sanitation programme on pupil absence in Nyanza Province, Kenya: a cluster‐randomized trial , 2011, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[5]  A. Dalsgaard,et al.  Specificity for field enumeration of Escherichia coli in tropical surface waters. , 2001, Journal of Microbiological Methods.

[6]  Mei-Chiung Shih,et al.  Reducing Absenteeism From Gastrointestinal and Respiratory Illness in Elementary School Students: A Randomized, Controlled Trial of an Infection-Control Intervention , 2008, Pediatrics.

[7]  P. Freeman,et al.  Hand washing among school children in Bogotá, Colombia. , 2009, American journal of public health.

[8]  Alex Mwaki,et al.  Evaluation of the role of school children in the promotion of point-of-use water treatment and handwashing in schools and households--Nyanza Province, Western Kenya, 2007. , 2010, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[9]  O. Toure,et al.  Hygiene: new hopes, new horizons , 2011, The Lancet Infectious Diseases.

[10]  A. Mwaki,et al.  Is soapy water a viable solution for handwashing in schools , 2010 .

[11]  E. Mintz,et al.  A cluster-randomized controlled trial evaluating the effect of a handwashing-promotion program in Chinese primary schools. , 2007, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[12]  E. Kaltenthaler,et al.  Microbiological methods for assessing handwashing practice in hygiene behaviour studies. , 1995, The Journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[13]  R. Aunger,et al.  Three kinds of psychological determinants for hand-washing behaviour in Kenya. , 2010, Social science & medicine.

[14]  Jennifer Davis,et al.  Hands, water, and health: fecal contamination in Tanzanian communities with improved, non-networked water supplies. , 2010, Environmental science & technology.

[15]  M. S. Islam,et al.  Variability in hand contamination based on serial measurements: implications for assessment of hand-cleansing behavior and disease risk. , 2011, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[16]  V. Curtis,et al.  The Effect of Handwashing with Water or Soap on Bacterial Contamination of Hands , 2011, International journal of environmental research and public health.

[17]  J. Pinfold,et al.  Measuring the effect of a hygiene behaviour intervention by indicators of behaviour and diarrhoeal disease. , 1996, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[18]  C. Mathers,et al.  Global, regional, and national causes of child mortality in 2008: a systematic analysis , 2010, The Lancet.

[19]  Jennifer Davis,et al.  Bacterial hand contamination among Tanzanian mothers varies temporally and following household activities , 2011, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[20]  Jennifer Davis,et al.  Efficacy of waterless hand hygiene compared with handwashing with soap: a field study in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. , 2010, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[21]  M. Ravani,et al.  The impact of a school-based safe water and hygiene programme on knowledge and practices of students and their parents: Nyanza Province, western Kenya, 2006 , 2007, Epidemiology and Infection.

[22]  Isaac CH Fung,et al.  Water, sanitation and hygiene for the prevention of diarrhoea , 2010, International journal of epidemiology.

[23]  F. Racioppi,et al.  Reduction of fecal contamination of street-vended beverages in Guatemala by a simple system for water purification and storage, handwashing, and beverage storage. , 1998, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[24]  P M Fayers,et al.  Cluster-randomized trials , 2002, Palliative medicine.

[25]  A. Marfin,et al.  Effects of Hand Hygiene Campaigns on Incidence of Laboratory-confirmed Influenza and Absenteeism in Schoolchildren, Cairo, Egypt , 2011, Emerging infectious diseases.

[26]  S. Luby,et al.  Field trial of a low cost method to evaluate hand cleanliness , 2007, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[27]  J. Koopman Diarrhea and school toilet hygiene in Cali, Colombia. , 1978, American journal of epidemiology.

[28]  M. Kadir,et al.  A community‐randomised controlled trial promoting waterless hand sanitizer and handwashing with soap, Dhaka, Bangladesh , 2010, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[29]  V. Curtis,et al.  The effect of a soap promotion and hygiene education campaign on handwashing behaviour in rural India: a cluster randomised trial , 2009, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[30]  S. McMahon,et al.  Anal cleansing practices and faecal contamination: a preliminary investigation of behaviours and conditions in schools in rural Nyanza Province, Kenya , 2011, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[31]  V. Curtis,et al.  Comparing the performance of indicators of hand‐washing practices in rural Indian households , 2008, Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH.

[32]  B. B. Jensen,et al.  The potential of schoolchildren as health change agents in rural western Kenya. , 2005, Social science & medicine.

[33]  M. Rahbar,et al.  Microbiologic effectiveness of hand washing with soap in an urban squatter settlement, Karachi, Pakistan , 2001, Epidemiology and Infection.