Publications by authors named "Sclar G"

Article Synopsis
  • People with structural vulnerabilities, like immigrants and those without housing or insurance, face significant barriers to COVID-19 testing, leading to disparities in testing compared to other populations.
  • The study included interviews with 34 vulnerable individuals and 27 service providers, using a hybrid model to analyze reported barriers, including economic and legal issues that complicate access to testing.
  • The findings highlight the need for public health strategies that address these structural barriers to improve access to testing and ensure equitable healthcare during future health crises.
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Background: Poor child feces management contributes to enteropathogen exposure and, consequently, is associated with diarrheal disease and negative impacts on child growth. Despite high latrine coverage, only 37% of Indian households safely dispose of their child's feces into a latrine or have the child use the latrine, with the lowest rate in the state of Odisha at 12%. We evaluated a behavior change and hardware intervention designed to improve caregiver safe disposal of child feces and child latrine use.

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Background: The COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately affected people from structurally vulnerable communities. There was a need to improve COVID-19 testing in these communities to reduce viral spread and connect to treatment.

Objective: We created a partnership between an academic medical center and three community-based organizations (CBOs) to offer low-barrier COVID-19 walk-up testing clinics in Portland, Maine.

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Child feces are an important source of fecal exposure in household environments. Typically, one of two behaviors is necessary to mitigate this risk: either caregivers dispose of their children's feces into a latrine or children learn how to use a latrine. Although past studies have examined factors associated with these two behaviors collectively (i.

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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.

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Article Synopsis
  • Poor child feces management is a significant issue in low-income areas, contributing to the spread of enteric diseases, prompting the development of an intervention in rural Odisha, India, to promote safe disposal practices among caregivers.
  • The intervention includes six behavior change strategies and provides tools such as wash basins, lidded buckets, and latrine training mats, aiming to enhance safe feces disposal and encourage earlier latrine use for children under five.
  • A randomized trial will measure the effectiveness of this intervention by assessing caregiver-reported safe disposal practices and potential reductions in fecal contamination, alongside a process evaluation to gather feedback on the implementation.
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Behaviors related to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) are key drivers of infectious disease transmission, and experiences of WASH are potential influencers of mental well-being. Important knowledge gaps exist related to the content and delivery of effective WASH programs and their associated health impacts, particularly within the contexts of government programs implemented at scale. We developed and tested a demand-side intervention called Andilaye, which aimed to change behaviors related to sanitation, personal hygiene, and household environmental sanitation.

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Studies show positive impacts of social support on childcare practices, but there is limited research on child toilet training. Social support with toilet training may be especially important for rural Indian caregivers as this is a new childcare practice for many and mothers face an already demanding workload. The aim of this study was to examine the role of social support in toilet training using mediation and conditional process analyses.

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Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) practices emerged as a critical component to controlling and preventing the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. We conducted 131 semistructured phone interviews with households in rural Odisha, India, to understand behavior changes made in WASH practices as a result of the pandemic and challenges that would prevent best practices. Interviews were conducted from May through July 2020 with 73 heads of household, 37 caregivers of children < 5 years old, and 21 members of village water and sanitation committees in villages with community-level piped water and high levels of latrine ownership.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study conducted 131 semi-structured interviews with rural households in Odisha, India to assess their awareness and actions regarding COVID-19, as well as the pandemic's impact on their daily lives and community response.
  • Most participants displayed a good understanding of symptoms (75%) but showed less knowledge about the disease's causes and high-risk groups, especially among caregivers.
  • Despite high adherence to preventative measures like social distancing and mask-wearing, the pandemic resulted in significant challenges such as job loss (31%), financial strains (93%), food insecurity (61%), and negative emotional effects, highlighting the need for resilience-building strategies for vulnerable communities.
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Article Synopsis
  • WASH practices became essential for controlling COVID-19, prompting a study of behavior changes in rural Odisha, India through 131 semi-structured phone interviews conducted between May and July 2020.
  • The majority of participants (86%) reported improved handwashing habits, which included increased frequency and better techniques, suggesting the formation of new, lasting habits even months after the initial pandemic changes.
  • While some advancements were noted in other WASH behaviors, such as water treatment and cleaning, there was little change in latrine use and child feces management, emphasizing the need for adequate WASH infrastructure to support safe practices during health crises.
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While latrine coverage is increasing in India, not all household members use their latrines. Cost-effective, culturally appropriate, and theory-informed behavior change interventions are necessary to encourage sustained latrine use by all household members. We qualitatively examined community perceptions of sanitation interventions broadly, along with specific impressions and spillover of community-level activities of the Sundara Grama latrine use behavior change intervention in rural Odisha, India.

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Safe child feces management (CFM) is likely critical for reducing exposure to fecal pathogens in and around the home, but the effectiveness of different CFM practices in reducing fecal contamination is not well understood. We conducted a cross-sectional study of households with children <6 years in rural Odisha, India, using household surveys (188 households), environmental sample analysis (373 samples for 80 child defecation events), and unstructured observation (33 households) to characterize practices and measure fecal contamination resulting from CFM-related practices, including defecation, feces handling and disposal, defecation area or tool cleaning, anal cleansing, and handwashing. For environmental sampling, we developed a sampling strategy that involved collecting samples at the time and place of child defecation to capture activity-level fecal contamination for CFM practices.

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Community-level action may be required to achieve the levels of sanitation uptake necessary for health gains. Evidence suggests that collective action is influenced by collective efficacy (CE)-a group's belief in its abilities to organize and execute action to achieve common goals. The extent to which it is necessary to fully contextualize existing CE measurement tools, in order to conduct meaningful assessments of the factors influencing CE perceptions, is not well understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explores the impact of improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) on infectious diseases and mental well-being, highlighting gaps in effective WASH programming and the need for community-based interventions in rural Ethiopia.
  • - The intervention, named Andilaye, will be evaluated through a cluster-randomized trial involving 50 sub-districts, measuring changes in sanitation and hygiene behaviors as well as mental health outcomes over time.
  • - The research aims to address issues such as behavioral regression seen in previous sanitation initiatives, thereby providing insights into sustaining positive health behaviors in communities.
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Background: Despite health benefits of sanitation, an estimated 12% of the global population practices open defecation, including an estimated 50% of the population of India. Current estimates, however, do not include households that own toilets but do not use them, suggesting that the actual number of people defecating in the open is underestimated. This protocol describes a cluster randomized controlled trial to evaluate an intervention specifically designed to increase latrine use, including the safe disposal of child feces, in rural Odisha, India.

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The WHO defines health not as the absence of disease but as a "state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being." To date, public health research on sanitation has focused mainly on the impact of sanitation on infectious diseases and related sequelae, such as diarrhea and malnutrition. This review focuses on the mental and social well-being implications of sanitation.

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Objective: To quantify stated preferences for latrine use and construction in Amhara, Ethiopia, using Discrete Choice Experiments (DCEs).

Methods: We conducted image-based DCEs to assess preferences for latrine use (stratified by gender) and construction (among men only) in Amhara, Ethiopia. Preference was quantified using a conditional logistic model to estimate utilities and corresponding odds ratios associated with a set of latrine attributes.

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Cell viability and gene expression profiles are altered in cellular models of neurodegenerative disorders such as Huntington's Disease (HD). Using the yeast model system, we show that the SUMO-targeted ubiquitin ligase (STUbL) Slx5 reduces the toxicity and abnormal transcriptional activity associated with a mutant, aggregation-prone fragment of huntingtin (Htt), the causative agent of HD. We demonstrate that expression of an aggregation-prone Htt construct with 103 glutamine residues (103Q), but not the non-expanded form (25Q), results in severe growth defects in Δ and Δ cells.

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Impact evaluations of water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions have demonstrated lower than expected health gains, in some cases due to low uptake and sustained adoption of interventions at a community level. These findings represent common challenges for public health and development programmes relying on collective action. One possible explanation may be low collective efficacy (CE)-perceptions regarding a group's ability to execute actions related to a common goal.

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Objective: We undertook this systematic review to explore the relationship between sanitation and learning outcomes, specifically cognitive development and absence.

Methods: We searched leading databases to identify experimental and observational studies that address the effect of sanitation on our outcomes of interest. We identified 17 studies that met the review's eligibility criteria, four reporting on measures of cognitive development, 12 on school absence (with two studies reporting on school and work absence), and one study that reported on both outcomes.

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Background: Sanitation aims to sequester human feces and prevent exposure to fecal pathogens. More than 2.4 billion people worldwide lack access to improved sanitation facilities and almost one billion practice open defecation.

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Introduction: Government efforts to address massive shortfalls in rural water and sanitation in India have centred on construction of community water sources and toilets for selected households. However, deficiencies with water quality and quantity at the household level and community coverage and actual use of toilets have led Gram Vikas, a local non-governmental organization in Odisha, India, to develop an approach that provides household-level piped water connections contingent on full community-level toilet coverage.

Methods: This matched cohort study was designed to assess the effectiveness of a combined piped water and sanitation intervention.

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Background: An estimated 2.4 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation and 946 million still practice open defecation. The World Health Organization (WHO) commissioned this review to assess the impact of sanitation on coverage and use, as part of its effort to develop a set of guidelines on sanitation and health.

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Objective: Fecal-oral transmission of enteric and other pathogens due to poor sanitation is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, especially in low- or middle-income settings. Few studies have investigated the impact of sanitation on indicators of transmission, a prerequisite to achieving health gains. This review attempts to summarize the literature to date.

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