Malnutrition Clinical Trial
Official title:
WASH Benefits Kenya: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial of the Benefits of Sanitation, Water Quality, Handwashing, and Nutrition Interventions on Child Health and Development
The purpose of this study is to measure the independent and combined effects of interventions that improve sanitation, water quality, handwashing, and nutrition on child health and development in the first years of life.
Children in resource-poor settings are at risk of multiple episodes of diarrhea, enteric
infections, and environmental enteropathy, an inflammatory disorder of the intestines that
compromises nutrient absorption (1). In cross-sectional analyses, repeated episodes of
diarrhea and chronic environmental enteropathy in early childhood are associated with reduced
growth and cognitive function, and impaired school performance which can reduce income later
in life (2-8). Although more evidence is needed to establish causal links, repeated episodes
of childhood diarrhea and enteric infection may exact a long-run toll, perpetuating a cycle
of poverty and ill health.
Infection and inadequate diet are proximate risk factors for undernutrition and early life
growth faltering; the two processes likely act reciprocally in a vicious cycle that
perpetuates physiologic and metabolic deficits and increases the risk of mortality. Children
who exhibit growth faltering are more likely to have deficits in cognitive development and
long-term human capital, and are more likely to have children who also suffer from growth
deficits - perpetuating the cycle into the next generation.
There are two probable interdependent pathways that link enteric infections to child growth
and development. The first pathway includes repeated infections that lead to acute illness or
parasitic infection in the first years of life, which increase the risk of stunting and
subsequent cognitive deficits in childhood and later in life. The second pathway is through
subclinical environmental enteropathy.
There is limited evidence to demonstrate whether or not water quality, sanitation, and
handwashing (WASH) interventions can improve measures of environmental enteropathy, child
growth and development, and whether nutritional interventions could be enhanced if provided
concurrently with WASH interventions. To help fill this evidence gap, the WASH Benefits study
will deliver randomized interventions designed to reduce infection and improve nutrition, and
will measure intervention effects on child illness, growth and development. WASH Benefits
includes two, comparable but standalone trials in Bangladesh and Kenya that are registered
under separate protocols.
In Kenya, the study will include approximately 800 clusters, and each cluster will enroll
approximately 10 household compounds with pregnant women in their second or third trimester.
The study will randomize 100 clusters to each of 6 active intervention arms (water quality,
sanitation, handwashing, combined WSH, nutrition, nutrition+WSH), 200 clusters to a double
size active control arm, and 100 clusters to a single-sized passive control arm (measurement
pending future funding). Children born into the cohort will be followed for 2 years after the
intervention, with measurements at 12 and 24 months after intervention delivery. (anticipated
age range: 20 - 27 months old at the final measurement). At the 12- and 24-month follow-up
visits, the study will collect child anthropometric measurements and caregiver-reported
diarrhea. In the final visit the study will administer a test to measure child development
outcomes. The study will collect urine, blood, and stool specimens from a subsample of 1,500
children distributed across four arms of the study (Active Control, Combined WSH, Nutrition,
Nutrition+WSH) to measure biomarkers of gut function and intestinal parasitic infections at
the 12- and 24-month follow-up visits. In addition, the study will collect specimens (blood,
stool) from children 18 - 27 months old at baseline who are living in the same compound as
target children to test for intestinal parasitic infections.
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