학술논문

The role of water, sanitation and hygiene interventions in reducing soil-transmitted helminths: interpreting the evidence and identifying next steps
Document Type
article
Source
Parasites & Vectors. 12(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Prevention
Clean Water and Sanitation
Animals
Clinical Trials as Topic
Communicable Disease Control
Feces
Helminthiasis
Helminths
Humans
Hygiene
Sanitation
Schools
Soil
Water
Soil-transmitted helminths
WASH
Medical Microbiology
Public Health and Health Services
Mycology & Parasitology
Tropical Medicine
Microbiology
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
The transmission soil transmitted helminths (STH) occurs via ingestion of or contact with infective stages present in soil contaminated with human faeces. It follows therefore that efforts to reduce faecal contamination of the environment should help to reduce risk of parasite exposure and improvements in water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) are seen as essential for the long-term, sustainable control of STH. However, the link between WASH and STH is not always supported by the available evidence from randomised controlled trials, which report mixed effects of WASH intervention on infection risk. This review critically summarises the available trial evidence and offers an interpretation of the observed heterogeneity in findings. The review also discusses the implications of findings for control programmes and highlights three main issues which merit further consideration: intervention design, exposure assessment, and intervention fidelity assessment.