Unit 7 - WASH, water & sanitation
Ignaz Semmelweiss observed what at Vienna General Hospital?
- 2% mortality rate for puerperal fever in midwives ward - 18.3% mort rate in the med students ward
Main zoonotic enteric pathogens
- Bacteria: Campylobacter, E. coli (STEC), nontyphoidal Salmonella - Protoza: Cyrpto, Giardia - Viruses: rotavirus, norovirus
what is sanitation and what are its 5 components?
- Defined: safe removal of human excreta - capture, storage, transport, treatment, reuse
Ecuador microbe results
- children: Giardia, Campylobacter, aEPEC (atypical EPEC) - chickens, guinea pigs, pigs dogs: campylobacter primarily
Env Enteric Dysfunction study findings
- generally asymptomatic for diarrhea (diarrhea observed 7% of the time - infants exp stunting had enteropathy 75% of the time
Study on children's exposure studied and concluded what?
- observed children in their env and sampled everything children put in their mouths - conclu: children should be protected from exploratory ingestion of chicken feces
sanitation facilities not considered improved by UN standards
- public/shared by more than one household
STHs = what and aka what?
- soil-transmitted helminths aka geohelminths
What 3 things do NOT fall under sanitation?
- solid waste (trash) - food safety - home/workplace cleanliness
Small scale livestock affects how many ppl and where?
1 billion, and in small + middle income countries
common indicators used for hand washing
1. % who know all critical moments for HW (question) 2. % of households w/soap & water at HW station commonly used by fam (obs) 3. % households w/soap & water at HW station inside or w/in 10 paces of latrine (obs) 4. % households w/soap or locally avail cleaning agent for HW anywhere in household 5. vol of lac-based hand gel consume on per-pt basis (usually in health care facility only)
3 different meta studies about hand washing & diarrhea
1. Curtis & Cairncross, 2003: 10 studies, estimated 47% redux 2. Fewtrell et al 2005: 11 studies, 44% redux 3. Ejemot et al 2007: 5 comm-based studies in low-inc countries, 31% redux
Ecuador microbiological methods
1. Direct plating methods and biochem tests 2. PCR 3. Multilocus sequence typing
examples of improved sanitation
1. Flush toilet 2. Connection to a piped sewer system 3. Connection to a septic system 4. Flush / pour-flush to a pit latrine 5. Pit latrine with slab 6. Ventilated improved pit latrine (abbreviated as VIP latrine) 7. Composting toilet
contextual factors for HW
1. HW w/soap requires money, time, water & space 2. ppl who would benefit most are often least educated & have lowest income 3. using soap is not cultural habit
4 avg measures of HWWS across 11 countries
1. HWWS after toilet: 17% 2. HWWS after cleaning child: 13% 3. HWWS after cleaning up child stools: 19% 4. HWWS before feeding child: 5%
4 leading pathogens causing diarrhea & diarrheal-realted death
1. Rotavirus 2. Cryptosporidium 3. pathogenic E. coli 4. Shigella
top 3 enteric pathogens causing diarrhea in 0-11 month old children
1. Rotavirus 2. cryptosporidium 3. shigella-toxin E. coli
Top 3 pathogens causing most deaths
1. ST-ETEC 2. tEPEC 3. Cryptosporidum
6 Factors in deciding on appropriate sanitation solutions
1. affordable 2. available 3. culturally acceptable 4. easy to use & maintain 5. sufficient capacity for O & M 6. environmentally sound
6 main WHO-approved household water treatment options
1. chlorination safe water system (SWS) 2. combined flocculent/disinfx 3. ceramic filtration 4. biosand filtration 5. solar/SODIS 6. Boiling
In addition to death, malnutrition can also lead to what in children?
1. cognitive impairment 2. decreased wages 3. increased chronic diseases
examples of unimproved sanitation
1. hanging toilets (waste goes nowhere) 2. public toilet (tragedy of commons) 3. pit latrine with no cleanable surface 4. Flush/pour flush to elsewhere (not into a pit, septic tank, or sewer) 5. Pit latrine without slab 6. Bucket latrines 7. No facilities / bush / field (open defecation)
more barriers to improved handwashing
1. little perceived benefit (mostly I'm fine/not sick without HW) 2. not linked to cultural concepts of purity, good mothering, sexual attraction 3. is not seen as a habit
top 3 enteric pathogens causing diarrhea in 12-23 month old children
1. rotavirus 2. shigella spp 3. cryptosporidium
most pathologically important helminths and how many ppl do they impact?
1. roundworms - 1.2 billion 2. whipworms - 800 million 3. hookworms - 740 million
3 main protective barriers to the fecal-oral route:
1. sanitation (fluids, flies, fields/floors) 2. clean water supply (food) 3. hygiene/hand-washing (fingers, flies, fields/floors)
top 3 enteric pathogens causing diarrhea in 24-59 month old children
1. shigella sp 2. rotavirus 3. Campylobacter jejuni
Env Enteric dysfunction is thought to cause what?
1. stunting 2. malnutrition 3. oral fax failure 4. impaired cognitive development
malnutrition is underlying cause of approx how many child deaths annually?
1.5 million
approx how many cases of severe diarrhea throughout the world each day?
100,000
Chlorine started to be used in drinking water in Philly when? And what endemic infx was tracked as declining in conjunction with?
1914 - typhoid
safe water storage results in approx what % redux in diarrhea
21%
sanitation results in approx what % redux in diarrhea
30%
point of use water treatment results in approx what % redux in diarrhea
30-50% (2x as effective as interventions that improve water quality at the source)
wand washing with soap results in approx what % redux in diarrhea
43%
approx redux in roundworm, whipworm, hookworm with improved sanitation
46%, 42%, 40%
Ecuador study overview
480 households 6 zoonotic enterpathogens children <5 yrs old household animal species households w/no animals vs households w/animals
effect of sewerage on diarrhea
59% redux
child age of greatest # of diarrheal episodes per day across all age-groups
6-11 months, followed by 1 year
Ecuador summary
Campylobacter jejuni & atypical EPEC likely transmitted from domestic animals to children --> aEPEC: pigs, chix, dogs --> C. jejuni: chix, guinea pigs, rabbits, dogs
Ecuador sequence typing results
Campylobacter sequence types found in both children and many of the animals, chickens primarily
main question to consider with hygiene interventions
Can improvements be sustained?
T/F Only severe diarrhea can effect children's nutrition and growth
F - even moderate diarrhea can
Fecal-oral route of disease - F-diagram
Feces --> fluids, fingers, flies, fields/floors --> food --> child
Direct effect WASH has on nutrition
Frequent or chronic diarrheal episodes result in deviation from weight-for-age normal curve
Ecuador study: most prevalent pathogen in children
Giardia (34.4%), also in dogs, rabbits, pigs, guinea pigs, sheep
MDG tasked with safe drinking water and basic sanitation
Goal 7: Target 7C: halve by 2015 proportion of ppl without access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation
Semmelweiss' study
Had med students wash hands with chlorinated lime after studying cadavers, puerperal fever mort dropped to about 2% - i.e. hand washing saves lives
HWWS
Hand washing with soap
Ecuador study survey instruments
Household survey: - demographic info - WASH - SES - Child-animal infx - medication use - health status Animal mgmt survey Fecal sample collection
A child is considered stunted when?
If they are more than 2 standard deviations below the mean height for age z-score
Sandy Cairncross quote
Lots of people without toilets and lots of toilets without people
Which MDG targets were met, which were not?
Met: global MDG water target Unmet: global MDG sanitation target
Environmental Enteric Dysfunction
Microbes that enter and take up residence in the gut as a result of poor sanitation conditions results in physiological dysfunction of the gut - intestinal inflammation without overt diarrhea - acquired early in childhood
2015 MDG target for sanitation - hit or missed?
Missed by 700 million
STHs affect approx how many ppl?
Over 1 billion
ST-ETEC
Shigella-toxin producing enterotoxigenic E. coli
SDG relating to sanitation goals and by when?
Target 6.2: by 2030 achieve adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all, end open defecation, paying special attention to needs of women and girls
Study re: positive impact of livestock ownership found what?
Tenfold increase in household livestock ownership had significant association with lower stunting prevalence in 2 of 3 countries
Purpose of mulitlocus sequence typing
To assess relatedness/strains of pathogens
T/F: EED is a reversible/resolvable condition
True: resolves with migration to high income countries; also shown to occur in Peace Corps volunteers and resolve within 12 months
WASH
WAter, Sanitation, Hygiene
what animal has been ID'ed as a primary culprit for spreading diarrheal disease?
chickens
tragedy of commons
concept that applies when a public utility/resource isn't good for anyone because no one takes care of it
EPEC
enteropathogenic E. coli
Other health outcomes effected by WASH
hepatitis A, E, F legionellosis scabies arsenicosis fluorosis
what is the main indicator/marker of malnutrition and how is it measured?
stunting: measured by comparing a child's height for age to a reference group
3 main ways water can become contaminated
transport handling storage
risk factors of animal excreta contamination are primarily related to what?
water