Assessment of quality of some community's water, sanitation, hygiene practicies and occurrence of water-borne infections among residents in Imo State
dc.contributor.author | Nnoli, Matthew Chuks | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-05-13T13:42:29Z | |
dc.date.available | 2025-05-13T13:42:29Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2024-08 | |
dc.description | This thesis is for the award of Doctor of Philosophy(PhD.) in Public Health | |
dc.description.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. | |
dc.identifier.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 | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://repository.futo.edu.ng/handle/20.500.14562/1864 | |
dc.language.iso | en | |
dc.publisher | Federal University of Technology, Owerri | |
dc.rights | Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International | en |
dc.rights.uri | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ | |
dc.subject | Drinking water | |
dc.subject | sanitation | |
dc.subject | hygiene | |
dc.subject | water borne | |
dc.subject | infections | |
dc.subject | Imo State | |
dc.subject | Department of Public Health | |
dc.title | Assessment of quality of some community's water, sanitation, hygiene practicies and occurrence of water-borne infections among residents in Imo State | |
dc.type | Doctoral Thesis |