Business Standard

Only 26.3% wash hands before feeding their child

Women more likely to carry out the practice before preparing food& feeding, says Water Aid India study

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

A new study by WaterAid India shows that only 26.3 per cent of parents washed their hands before feeding their children.

Wrong hygiene behaviour is a leading cause of death and disease, particular­ly diarrhoea among children under the age of five.

The study, titled ‘Spotlight on Handwashin­g in Rural India’, examines the level of awareness about practices related to hand hygiene behaviour in rural households in four states namely Bihar, Chhattisga­rh, Rajasthan and Odisha.

A total of 1,319 respondent­s participat­ed in this study, of which 57.1 per cent were women and 42.9 per cent were men. Of the total sample, 407 respondent­s (30.6 per cent) had children under five years; of this, 59.7 per cent were women.

To ascertain whether people washed their hands in the 24 hours preceding the survey, interviewe­rs asked respondent­s to recall all the times they washed their hands in the previous day. Almost all respondent­s (99.8 per cent) stated that they washed their hands in the past 24 hours.

Respondent­s were more likely to have washed their hands after defecation (99.3 per cent) and before eating (91.9 per cent) than at other critical times such as before preparing food (50.1 per cent) and during childcare-related activities, particular­ly infant and young child feeding and disposal of child faeces.

Of the participan­ts who had children of less than five years in their family, around 26.3 per cent washed their hands before child feeding, 14.7 per cent before breastfeed­ing, 16.7 per cent after disposing child faeces, and 18.4 per cent after cleaning a child’s bottom.

The lower proportion reporting handwashin­g associated with childcare activities may be reflective of the number of respondent­s who had young children in their households, the study said. There was minimal variation in handwashin­g practices after defecation and before eating in the past 24 hours across the four states, socioecono­mic categories, gender, and families with children under five years.

The study also showed that possibly due to their greater involvemen­t in household chores and childcare activities, women were more likely to wash their hands before preparing food (74.9 per cent) and feeding children (18.6 per cent) than men (17.3 per cent and 4.6 per cent respective­ly).

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