Summarizing the Child Growth and Diarrhea Findings of the Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Benefits and Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy Trials.

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ID: 87305
2020
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Abstract
Stunting is a prevalent form of child undernutrition and is associated with lifelong adverse health outcomes and loss of human capital. The Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) Benefits (Bangladesh and Kenya) and Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy (SHINE; Zimbabwe) trials were conducted to test the independent and combined effects of improved household WASH (improved pit latrine, handwashing station not connected to a water source, point-of-use water chlorination) and improved infant and young child feeding (IYCF, complementary feeding counseling and daily small-quantity lipid nutrient supplement) on child linear growth. Together the trials enrolled >19,000 women during pregnancy and measured >15,000 of their children at 18 months (SHINE) or 24 months (WASH Benefits trials) of age. Throughout the 3 trials, the IYCF intervention increased mean length-for-age Z-score by 0.13-0.26. None of the WASH interventions had any effect on linear growth among any of the study populations. This lack of effect is most likely because the household-level elementary WASH interventions employed in the trials were not effective enough in reducing enteropathogen exposure to facilitate linear growth. Consensus papers of the trials recommend identification and implementation of "transformative WASH" - interventions that radically reduce fecal exposure - to be made available to rural low-income populations.
Reference Key
makasi2020summarizingnestle Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Makasi, Rachel R;Humphrey, Jean H;
Journal nestle nutrition institute workshop series
Year 2020
DOI
10.1159/000503350
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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