@article{96530, keywords = {Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Health Policy, Health (social science), Medicine (miscellaneous)}, author = {Caruso BA and Sclar GD and Routray P and Nagel CL and Majorin F and Sola S and Koehne WJ and Clasen T}, title = {Effect of a low-cost, behaviour-change intervention on latrine use and safe disposal of child faeces in rural Odisha, India: a cluster-randomised controlled trial}, abstract = {

Background

Uptake of Government-promoted sanitation remains a challenge in India. We aimed to investigate a low-cost, theory-driven, behavioural intervention designed to increase latrine use and safe disposal of child faeces in India.

Methods

We did a cluster-randomised controlled trial between Jan 30, 2018, and Feb 18, 2019, in 66 rural villages in Puri, Odisha, India. Villages were eligible if not adjacent to another included village and not designated by the Government to be open-defecation free. All latrine-owning households in selected villages were eligible. We assigned 33 villages to the intervention via stratified randomisation. The intervention was required to meet a limit of US$20 per household and included a folk performance, transect walk, community meeting, recognition banners, community wall painting, mothers’ meetings, household visits, and latrine repairs. Control villages received no intervention. Neither participants nor field assessors were masked to study group assignment. We estimated intervention effects on reported latrine use and safe disposal of child faeces 4 months after completion of the intervention delivery using a difference-in-differences analysis and stratified results by sex. This study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03274245.

Findings

We enrolled 3723 households (1807 [48·5%] in the intervention group and 1916 [51·5%] in the control group). Analysis included 14 181 individuals (6921 [48·8%] in the intervention group and 7260 [51·2%] in the control group). We found an increase of 6·4 percentage points (95% CI 2·0–10·7) in latrine use and an increase of 15·2 percentage points (7·9–22·5) in safe disposal of child faeces. No adverse events were reported.

Interpretation

A low-cost behavioural intervention achieved modest increases in latrine use and marked increases in safe disposal of child faeces in the short term but was unlikely to reduce exposure to faecal pathogens to a level necessary to achieve health gains.

Funding

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and International Initiative for Impact Evaluation.

}, year = {2022}, journal = {The Lancet Planetary Health}, volume = {6}, pages = {e110-e121}, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, issn = {2542-5196}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542519621003247/pdfft?md5=80cc272908d4de3555610613f5f362c6&pid=1-s2.0-S2542519621003247-main.pdf}, doi = {10.1016/s2542-5196(21)00324-7}, language = {eng}, }