4.8 Article

Longitudinal Effects of a Sanitation Intervention on Environmental Fecal Contamination in a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural Bangladesh

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 12, Pages 8169-8179

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c01114

Keywords

latrine; potty; child feces management; WASH; fecal indicator bacteria; E. coli; disease transmission pathways; environmental sampling

Funding

  1. NIH [R01HD078912]
  2. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation [0PPGD759]

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The study found that household latrine access is not effective in reducing fecal contamination in the rural environment. While there were some reductions in stored water and child hands, the effects were small and inconsistent. Additional factors such as follow-up time, season, wealth, and community characteristics did not consistently modify the intervention effects.
Household latrine access generally is not associated with reduced fecal contamination in the environment, but its long-term effectiveness has not been measured. We conducted an environmental assessment nested within the WASH Benefits Bangladesh randomized controlled trial (NCT01590095). We quantified E. coli and fecal coliforms in samples of stored drinking water, child hands, mother hands, soil, and food among a random sample of households from the sanitation and control arms of the trial. Samples were collected during eight quarterly visits approximately 1-3.5 years after intervention initiation. Overall, there were no substantial differences in environmental fecal contamination between households enrolled in the sanitation and control arms. Statistically significant reductions were found in stored water and child hands after pooling across sampling rounds, but the effects were small and not consistent across rounds. In addition, we assessed potential effect modification of intervention effects by follow-up time, season, wealth, community-level latrine density and coverage, population density, and domestic animal ownership. While the intervention had statistically significant effects within some subgroups, there were no consistent patterns of effect modification. Our findings support a growing consensus that on-site latrines are insufficient to prevent fecal contamination in the rural household environment.

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