Psychosocial Factors Mediating the Effect of the CHoBI7 Intervention on Handwashing With Soap: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

George Christine Marie1,Biswas Shwapon2,Jung Danielle1,Perin Jamie1,Parvin Tahmina2,Monira Shirajum2,Saif-Ur-Rahman K. M.,Rashid Mahamud-ur2,Bhuyian Sazzadul Islam2,Thomas Elizabeth D.1,Dreibelbis Robert3,Begum Farzana2,Zohura Fatema2,Zhang Xiaotong1,Sack David A.1,Alam Munirul2,Sack R. Bradley1,Leontsini Elli1,Winch Peter J.1

Affiliation:

1. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA

2. International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh

3. University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA

Abstract

Inadequate hand hygiene is estimated to result in nearly 300,000 deaths annually, with the majority of deaths being among children younger than 5 years. In an effort to promote handwashing with soap and water treatment behaviors among highly susceptible household members of cholera patients, we recently developed the Cholera-Hospital-Based Intervention-for-7-Days (CHoBI7); chobi means picture in Bengali. This 1-week handwashing with soap and water treatment intervention is delivered by a promoter in the hospital and the home to cholera patients and their household members. In our randomized controlled trial of this intervention, we observed a significant reduction in symptomatic cholera infections during the 1-week intervention period compared to the control arm and sustained high uptake of observed handwashing with soap behaviors up to 12 months postintervention. The aim of the present study was to assess the underlying mechanism of change that led to the high handwashing with soap behavior observed among participants who received the CHoBI7 intervention. Handwashing with soap was measured using 5-hour structured observation, and psychosocial factors were assessed using a structured questionnaire among 170 intervention and 174 control household members enrolled in the CHoBI7 trial. To investigate potential mediators of the CHoBI7 intervention effect, mediation models were performed. Response efficacy was found to mediate the intervention’s effect on habit formation for handwashing with soap at the 1-week follow-up, and disgust, convenience, and cholera awareness were mediators of habit maintenance at the 6- to 12-month follow-up. These results support the use of theory-driven approaches for the development and implementation of handwashing with soap interventions.

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)

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