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Do Sanitation Improvements Reduce Fecal Contamination of Water, Hands, Food, Soil, and Flies? : Evidence from a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural Bangladesh (English)

Sanitation improvements have had limited effectiveness in reducing the spread of fecal pathogens into the environment. The authors conducted environmental measurements within a randomized controlled trial in Bangladesh that implemented individual and combined water treatment, sanitation, handwashing (WSH) and nutrition interventions (WASH). Following approximately 4 months of intervention, we enrolled households in the trial’s control, sanitation...
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Ercumen,Ayse; Pickering,Amy J.; Kwong,Laura H.; Mertens,Andrew; Arnold,Benjamin Ford; Benjamin-Chung,Jade; Hubbard,Alan Edward; Alam,Mahfuja; Sen,Debashis; Islam,Sharmin; Rahman,Md. Zahidur; Kullmann,Craig Phillip; Chase,Claire; Ahmed,Rokeya; Parvez,Sarker Masud; Unicomb,Leanne; Rahman,Mahbubur; Ram,Pavani K.; Clasen,Thomas; Luby,Stephen P.; Colford,John M. Jr.

Do Sanitation Improvements Reduce Fecal Contamination of Water, Hands, Food, Soil, and Flies? : Evidence from a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural Bangladesh (English). Author accepted manuscript Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/906701555511647669

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