AI Article Synopsis

  • A study in rural Bangladesh assessed if better sanitation facilities (like toilets) could lower the presence of rotavirus and fecal contamination in drinking water, children's hands, and soil.
  • The research showed that while there was a lot of animal fecal contamination related to livestock ownership, improvements in sanitation didn’t significantly decrease human fecal contamination or rotavirus presence.
  • The sanitation intervention did lead to some reduction in ruminant fecal contamination in drinking water and overall fecal pollution in the soil, but its impact on household contamination was minimal, suggesting the need for strategies to manage animal waste as well.

Article Abstract

We evaluated whether provision and promotion of improved sanitation hardware (toilets and child feces management tools) reduced rotavirus and human fecal contamination of drinking water, child hands, and soil among rural Bangladeshi compounds enrolled in a cluster-randomized trial. We also measured host-associated genetic markers of ruminant and avian feces. We found evidence of widespread ruminant and avian fecal contamination in the compound environment; non-human fecal marker occurrence scaled with animal ownership. Strategies for controlling non- human fecal waste should be considered when designing interventions to reduce exposure to fecal contamination in low-income settings. Detection of a human- associated fecal marker and rotavirus was rare and unchanged by provision and promotion of improved sanitation to intervention compounds. The sanitation intervention reduced ruminant fecal contamination in drinking water and general (non-host specific) fecal contamination in soil but overall had limited effects on reducing fecal contamination in the household environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7326215PMC

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