Assessment of quality of some community's water, sanitation, hygiene practicies and occurrence of water-borne infections among residents in Imo State

Date

2024-08

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Federal University of Technology, Owerri

Abstract

A total of 920 residents participated in this study. Largest age grade used was 31-40 years (33.7%), followed by 41-50 which is 214 (23.3%), those less than twenty years were 102 (11.1%). About 600 (65.2%) attained tertiary education, 24% attained secondary education while 6.5% and 4.3% attained primary and non-formal education respectively. 408 (44.3%) were civil servants, 114 (12.4) were artisan, and ½ of the residents earned 21,000 (25.7%). Common sources of drinking water are Spring 38.1%, borehole36.1% and lake/stream 0.4%. 240 (26.1%) of residents had distance to source of water <_ 100 meters and 132 (14.3%) had their distance > 1km. Major water fetchers were children under 15 years; adult female was 202 (22%). 580 (63.1%) do not treat their water, but 326 (35.4%) do treat – 254 (77.9%) use boiling, 30 (9.2%) use alum and clot, 12 (3.7%) do chlorination. 812 (88.3%) store water – 420 (51.7%) stores in plastic bucket/drum, 180 (22.3%) use Geepee and 140 (17.2%) use earth pot. For awareness of WASH protocols, 862 (93.7%) stated Yes, while 32 (3.4%) stated No: 426 (53.4%) knew through schools, 196(24.6%) via radio, 100 (12.5%) via tv and 8 (1.0%) through posters. The aware (83.8%) suffered from WASH-related infections and the unaware (94.5%) suffered too but the difference between these two groups is significant at 5% level (p<0.001, x2 = 13.570). 492 (53.5%) use water cistern toilet, 216 (23.5%) use latrines while 126 (13.7%) use pour flush latrines. 392 (42.6%) use tissue paper to clean after toilet use, 97% use tissue paper and water, 158 (17.2%) use paper, 94 (10.2%) use tissue paper, water and soap. 874 (95%) wash hand after toilet use while 22 (2.4%) do not. 620 (71.6%) use water and soap to wash hand after toilet use, 246 (28.4%) use water only. 536 (58.3%) have functional toilet: 216 (23.5%) toilet is provided by the age grade, 150 (16/3%) by individuals, and 78 (8.5%) by the government. 812 (88.3%) said proper excreta disposal improves community health, 70 respondents said no. 356 (38.7%) clean toilets weekly, 316 (34.3%) on daily basis and 122 (13.3%) on monthly basis. 882 (95.9%) are aware of hygiene protocols, 38 (4.1%) not aware: 694 (75.4%) use water and soap for hand cleaning, 188 (20.4%) use water only, 16 (1.7%) use detergents while 8 (1%) use water, ash and others. 6 (0.7%) use all methods. 232 (25.2%) wash hands before cooking, 228 (24.8%) wash hands when dirty, 202 (22.0%) wash hands after eating, 8 (0.9%) wash hands after cleaning baby’s bottom. 714 (77.6%) bathes twice daily, 190 (20.7%) bathes once daily, 16 (1.7%) bathe twice weekly. Hygiene practice reduce water-borne infections – 876 (95.2%) said Yes while 38 (4.1%) said No, Bacteria found in the study area are Enterococcus faecalis 15%, Klebsiella pneumonia 9%, Staph. Aureus, Bacillus cereus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa 8% each. 80 (8.7%) defecate in stream and trenches, 40 (4.3%) defecate in bushes and polyethene bags. 818 (88.9%) were aware that open defecation leads to disease. Cholera, skin infection, diarrhea, typhoid and malaria were WASH- related infections found.

Description

This thesis is for the award of Doctor of Philosophy(PhD.) in Public Health

Keywords

Drinking water, sanitation, hygiene, water borne, infections, Imo State, Department of Public Health

Citation

Nnoli, M. C. (2024). Assessment of quality of some community's water, sanitation, hygiene practices and occurrence of water-borne infections among residents in Imo State (Unpublished Doctoral Thesis). Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Nigeria

DOI

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