RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To characterise childhood mouthing and handling behaviours and to assess the association between hand-to-object and object-to-mouth contacts and diarrhoea prevalence in young children in urban Dhaka, Bangladesh. METHODS: A prospective cohort study was conducted among 494 children under 5 years of age in Dhaka, Bangladesh. This study was nested within the randomised controlled trial of the Cholera Hospital-Based Intervention for 7 Days (CHoBI7) mobile health (mHealth) program. The CHoBI7 mHealth program focuses on promoting handwashing with soap and water treatment to diarrhoea patients and their household members through mobile messages and a single in person visit. Mouthing and handling of faeces and fomites among young children was measured by five-hour structured observation and caregiver reports. Diarrhoea surveillance data was collected monthly for 12 months. RESULTS: Fifty five percent of caregivers reported that their child put a visibly dirty fomite (object or soil) in their mouth in the past week. Caregivers reported that 50% of children had mouthed visibly dirty objects, 26% had mouthed dirt, and 2% had mouthed faeces. Forty five percent of children were observed mouthing a visibly dirty fomite during structured observation, 40% of children were observed mouthing a visibly dirty object, 10% were observed mouthing soil, and one child (0.2%) was observed mouthing faeces. Mouthing of visibly dirty fomites was highest for children 12-18 months of age with 69% of these children having caregiver reports and 54% having observed events. Children with caregiver reports of mouthing faeces had a significantly higher odds of diarrhoea over the subsequent month (Odds Ratio: 4.54; 95% Confidence Interval: 1.06, 19.48). CONCLUSION: These findings demonstrate that mouthing of contaminated fomites among young children is frequent in urban environments in Bangladesh, and that mouthing faeces is associated with a significantly higher odds of diarrhoea. Interventions are urgently needed to protect young children from faecal pathogens in their play spaces.
OBJECTIF: Caractériser les comportements de mâchouillement et de manipulation par les enfants et évaluer l'association entre les contacts main-objet et objet-bouche et la prévalence de la diarrhée chez les jeunes enfants dans la ville de Dhaka, au Bangladesh. MÉTHODES: Une étude de cohorte prospective a été menée auprès de 494 enfants de moins de 5 ans à Dhaka, au Bangladesh. Cette étude s'inscrivait dans le cadre de l'essai contrôlé randomisé du programme CHoBI7 (Cholera-Hospital-Based-Intervention-for-7-days) de santé mobile (mHealth. Le programme de santé mobile CHoBI7 se concentre sur la promotion du traitement de l'eau et du lavage des mains avec à l'eau et au savon aux patients atteints de diarrhée et aux membres de leur foyer par le biais de messages mobiles et de visites de face à face. Le mâchouillement et la manipulation des excréments et des fomites chez les jeunes enfants ont été mesurés par des observations structurées de cinq heures et par les rapports des personnes s'occupant d'enfants (soignants). Les données de surveillance de la diarrhée ont été recueillies chaque mois pendant 12 mois. RÉSULTATS: 55% des soignants ont déclaré que leur enfant avait mis un fomite visiblement sale (objet ou terre) dans sa bouche au cours de la semaine précédente. Les soignants ont indiqué que 50% des enfants avaient mâchouillé des objets visiblement sales, 26% avaient mâchouillé de la terre et 2% avaient mâchouillé des excréments. 45% des enfants ont été observés en train de mâchouiller un fomite visiblement sale au cours d'une observation structurée. 40% des enfants ont été observés en train de mâchouiller un objet, 10% ont été observés en train de mâchouiller de la terre et un enfant (0,2%) a été observé en train de mâchouiller des excréments. Le mâchouillement de fomites visiblement sales était le plus fréquent chez les enfants de 12 à 18 mois; 69% de ces enfants ont été signalés par les soignants et 54% ont été observés en train de le faire. Les enfants dont les soignants avaient signalé un mâchouillement d'excréments présentaient un risque de diarrhée nettement plus élevé au cours du mois suivant (rapport de cotes: 4,54; intervalle de confiance à 95%: 1,06-19,48). CONCLUSION: Ces résultats démontrent que le fait de mâchouiller des fomites contaminés chez les jeunes enfants est fréquent en milieu urbain au Bangladesh et que le fait de mâchouiller des excréments est associé à un risque de diarrhée nettement plus élevé. Des interventions sont urgemment nécessaires pour protéger les jeunes enfants des agents pathogènes fécaux dans leurs espaces de jeu.
Assuntos
Diarreia/epidemiologia , Exposição Ambiental/estatística & dados numéricos , Fezes , Fômites/estatística & dados numéricos , Higiene , Bangladesh/epidemiologia , Pré-Escolar , Estudos de Coortes , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Boca , Prevalência , Estudos Prospectivos , Medição de RiscoRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To characterise childhood mouthing behaviours and to investigate the association between object-to-mouth and food-to-mouth contacts, diarrhoea prevalence and environmental enteropathy. METHODS: A prospective cohort study was conducted of 216 children ≤30 months of age in rural Bangladesh. Mouthing contacts with soil and food and objects with visible soil were assessed by 5-h structured observation. Stool was analysed for four faecal markers of intestinal inflammation: alpha-1-antitrypsin, myeloperoxidase, neopterin and calprotectin. RESULTS: Overall 82% of children were observed mouthing soil, objects with visible soil, or food with visible soil during the structured observation period. Sixty two percent of children were observed mouthing objects with visible soil, 63% were observed mouthing food with visible soil, and 18% were observed mouthing soil only. Children observed mouthing objects with visible soil had significantly elevated faecal calprotectin concentrations (206.81 µg/g, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 6.27, 407.36). There was also a marginally significant association between Escherichia coli counts in soil from a child's play space and the prevalence rate of diarrhoea (diarrhoea prevalence ratio: 2.03, 95% CI 0.97, 4.25). CONCLUSION: These findings provide further evidence to support the hypothesis that childhood mouthing behaviour in environments with faecal contamination can lead to environmental enteropathy in susceptible paediatric populations. Furthermore, these findings suggest that young children mouthing objects with soil, which occurred more frequently than soil directly (60% vs. 18%), was an important exposure route to faecal pathogens and a risk factor for environmental enteropathy.