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Sanitation, hygiene help improve health but not stunted growth

icddr,b scientists share findings


Wednesday, 31 January 2018


With a surprising discovery, scientists from icddr,b and Stanford have found that improving water, sanitation and hygiene in resource poor settings of Bangladesh helped overall health, reports UNB.
But, contrary to expectations, these did not improve children's growth and development, said the icddr,b on Tuesday sharing the findings.
Despite mounting research over the last decade linking poor sanitation to stunted growth in children, a new study found that children born into housing compounds with improvements in drinking water quality, sanitation and hand-washing infrastructure were not measurably taller after two years compared to those born into compounds with more contamination - although children who received the interventions were significantly healthier overall.
The WASH Benefits Bangladesh trial, led by Stanford epidemiologist Dr Stephen Luby, is one of the first to examine what are known as water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions as a way of improving children's growth in low-income communities.
How well a child grows in the first year can indicate overall wellbeing and is linked to both survival and brain development.
These WASH interventions have been proposed as a way of improving child growth and are being implemented in many communities around the world, but haven't been rigorously tested.
Commenting on the efficacy of WASH interventions in improving stunted growth Dr Luby said, "Part of what we learned is that this problem of stunting is not going to be easily fixed by a little bit of attention to water, sanitation and hygiene.
Modest efforts to marginally improve environments are not going to be sufficient. "If we want children in the lowest-income, most resource-constrained environments to thrive, we're going to need to make their environments radically cleaner."
Children in the Bangladesh trial who received nutritional supplements in addition to WASH interventions did grow taller and were less likely to die, but WASH interventions alone did not improve growth.
The study, published on Monday in The Lancet Global Health, examined the health and growth of children from over 5,000 pregnant women in rural Bangladesh after two years.
The mothers were grouped according to geographic clusters and randomly assigned to one of six interventions or a control group.
After two years, nearly all the interventions reduced diarrhoea. Although expected, the result is important because it suggests that families did adhere to the interventions.
It also creates hope that WASH interventions could beat back one of the greatest killers of children globally - the World Health Organisation estimates 361,000 children under five years of age die as a result of diarrhoea each year.
Of all the interventions, providing nutritional supplements in addition to combined water, sanitation and hand washing interventions had the greatest effect on curbing mortality in addition to improving growth.