Document Type

Article

Department

Anthropology

Publication Date

3-2016

Abstract

Background: Infectious disease interventions, such as vaccines and bed nets, have the potential to provide herd protection to non-recipients. Similarly, improved sanitation in one household may provide community-wide benefits if it reduces contamination in the shared environment. Sanitation at the household level is an important predictor of child growth, but less is known about the effect of sanitation coverage in the community.

Methods: From 2008 to 2013, we took repeated anthropometric measurements on 1314 children under 5 years of age in 24 rural Ecuadorian villages. Using mixed effects regression, we estimated the association between sanitation coverage in surrounding households and child growth.

Results: Sanitation coverage in the surrounding households was strongly associated with child height, as those with 100% coverage in their surroundings had a 67% lower prevalence of stunting [prevalence ratio (PR) 0.32, 95% CI 0.15-0.69] compared with those with 0% coverage. Children from households with improved sanitation had a lower prevalence of stunting (PR 0.86, 95% CI 0.64-1.15). When analysing height as a continuous outcome, the protective effect of sanitation coverage is manifested primarily among girls during the second year of life, the time at which growth faltering is most likely to occur.

Conclusions: Our study highlights that a household’s sanitation practices can provide herd protection to the overall community. Studies which fail to account for the positive externalities that sanitation provides will underestimate the overall protective effect. Future studies could seek to identify a threshold of sanitation coverage, similar to a herd immunity threshold, to provide coverage and compliance targets.

Comments

Published as:

James A Fuller, Eduardo Villamor, William Cevallos, James Trostle, Joseph NS Eisenberg; I get height with a little help from my friends: herd protection from sanitation on child growth in rural Ecuador. Int J Epidemiol 2016; 45 (2): 460-469. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyv368

Author's accepted manuscript provided by Trinity College Digital Repository in accordance with publisher distribution policies.

Publication Title

International Journal of Epidemiology

Volume

45

Issue

2

First Page

460

Last Page

469

DOI

10.1093/ije/dyv368

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