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Featured researches published by Bethany A. Caruso.


Social Science & Medicine | 2015

Sanitation-related psychosocial stress: A grounded theory study of women across the life-course in Odisha, India

Krushna Chandra Sahoo; Kristyna R. S. Hulland; Bethany A. Caruso; Rojalin Swain; Matthew C. Freeman; Pinaki Panigrahi; Robert Dreibelbis

While sanitation interventions have focused primarily on child health, womens unique health risks from inadequate sanitation are gaining recognition as a priority issue. This study examines the range of sanitation-related psychosocial stressors during routine sanitation practices in Odisha, India. Between August 2013 and March 2014, we conducted in-depth interviews with 56 women in four life stages: adolescent, newly married, pregnant and established adult women in three settings: urban slums, rural villages and indigenous villages. Using a grounded theory approach, the study team transcribed, translated, coded and discussed interviews using detailed analytic memos to identify and characterize stressors at each life stage and study site. We found that sanitation practices encompassed more than defecation and urination and included carrying water, washing, bathing, menstrual management, and changing clothes. During the course of these activities, women encountered three broad types of stressors-environmental, social, and sexual-the intensity of which were modified by the womans life stage, living environment, and access to sanitation facilities. Environmental barriers, social factors and fears of sexual violence all contributed to sanitation-related psychosocial stress. Though women responded with small changes to sanitation practices, they were unable to significantly modify their circumstances, notably by achieving adequate privacy for sanitation-related behaviors. A better understanding of the range of causes of stress and adaptive behaviors is needed to inform context-specific, gender-sensitive sanitation interventions.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Community Water Improvement, Household Water Insecurity, and Women’s Psychological Distress: An Intervention and Control Study in Ethiopia

Edward Stevenson; Argaw Ambelu; Bethany A. Caruso; Yihenew Tesfaye; Matthew C. Freeman

Background Over 650 million people worldwide lack access to safe water supplies, and even among those who have gained access to ‘improved’ sources, water may be seasonally unreliable, far from homes, expensive, and provide insufficient quantity. Measurement of water access at the level of communities and households remains crude, and better measures of household water insecurity are urgently needed to inform needs assessments and monitoring and evaluation. We set out to assess the validity of a quantitative scale of household water insecurity, and to investigate (1) whether improvements to community water supply reduce water insecurity, (2) whether water interventions affect women’s psychological distress, and (3) the impacts of water insecurity on psychological distress, independent of socio-economic status, food security, and harvest quality. Methods and Findings Measures were taken before and one to six months after a community water supply improvement in three villages in rural northern Ethiopia. Villages similar in size and access to water sources and other amenities did not receive interventions, and served as controls. Household water insecurity was assessed using a 21-item scale based on prior qualitative work in Ethiopia. Women’s psychological distress was assessed using the WHO Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20). Respondents were either female heads of household or wives of the heads of household (n = 247 at baseline, n = 223 at endline); 123 households provided data at both rounds. The intervention was associated with a decline of approximately 2 points on the water insecurity scale between baseline and endline compared to the control (beta -1.99; 95% CI’s -3.15, -0.84). We did not find evidence of impact of the intervention on women’s psychological distress. Water insecurity was, however, predictive of psychological distress (p <0.01), independent of household food security and the quality of the previous year’s harvest. Conclusion These results contribute to the construct validity of our water insecurity scale, and establish our approach to measuring water insecurity as a plausible means of evaluating water interventions. Improvements to community water supplies were effective in reducing household water insecurity, but not psychological distress, in this population. Water insecurity was an important predictor of psychological distress. This study contributes to an emerging literature on quantitative assessment of household water insecurity, and draws attention to the potential impact of improved access to water on women’s mental well-being.


The Lancet | 2015

Gender disparities in water, sanitation, and global health.

Bethany A. Caruso; Varadan Sevilimedu; Isaac Chun-Hai Fung; Archana Patkar; Kelly K. Baker

Celebrating World Water Day, The Lancet Editors highlighted the gains made towards Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 7c, “to halve, by 2015, the proportion of the population without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation”, and noted UN-Water’s call for sustainable water management in view of future increases in demand and shortfalls in supply. As the primary water collectors worldwide, women are disproportionately affected by the scarcity of adequate resources; however, global estimates of improvements in water access do not refl ect gender-disaggregated benefi ts and burdens. While water fetching, women have increased risks of infection from faecally transmitted diseases, such as ascariasis, trichuriasis, diarrhoea, and trachoma. Chronic or persistent infection, in addition to the physical effort of carrying water, causes fatigue that is not only harmful to women’s wellbeing, but also aff ects productivity and reduces energy and time for economic opportunities. Navigation of uneven terrain with substantial water loads can cause injury, especially if women are pregnant, carrying babies, or have recently given birth. Additionally, water fetching, bathing, and defecation in the open expose women and girls to sexual harassment. Adolescent girls are especially vulnerable—as sadly experienced in May, 2014, by two girls who were raped and hung in rural India. Women might respond to insufficient water resources by limitation of water intake and personal hygiene behaviours, resulting in psychosocial distress. Women’s hygiene linked to their menstrual cycle is often ignored in design and delivery of water and sanitation, increasing their susceptibility to urogenital infections. Children accompanying their mothers in these unsafe environments might likewise have increased risks of gastrointestinal infection and injury. With a 40% water shortfall estimated by 2030, women will face even greater challenges securing water. However, “global commitments made in the areas of water and sanitation (including the MDG goals) do not specifi cally address equitable division of power, work, access to, and control of, resources between women and men”. Imbalance between women’s water burden and denied agency in decision making underscore that post-2015 development targets alone will not reduce water access inequalities or enable future sustainability. Tackling women’s global infectious disease burden and assaults to their physical, mental, and social wellbeing should go beyond improvement of household water access to address underlying causes of gender inequality. G7 health commitments: greater specifi city for greater accountability


PLOS ONE | 2015

Sanitation, Stress, and Life Stage: A Systematic Data Collection Study among Women in Odisha, India.

Kristyna R. S. Hulland; Rachel P. Chase; Bethany A. Caruso; Rojalin Swain; Bismita Biswal; Krushna Chandra Sahoo; Pinaki Panigrahi; Robert Dreibelbis

Emerging evidence demonstrates how inadequate access to water and sanitation is linked to psychosocial stress, especially among women, forcing them to navigate social and physical barriers during their daily sanitation routines. We examine sanitation-related psychosocial stress (SRPS) across women’s reproductive lives in three distinct geographic sites (urban slums, rural villages, and rural tribal villages) in Odisha, India. We explored daily sanitation practices of adolescent, newly married, pregnant, and established adult women (n = 60) and identified stressors encountered during sanitation. Responding to structured data collection methods, women ranked seven sanitation activities (defecation, urination, menstruation, bathing, post-defecation cleaning, carrying water, and changing clothes) based on stress (high to low) and level of freedom (associated with greatest freedom to having the most restrictions). Women then identified common stressors they encountered when practicing sanitation and sorted stressors in constrained piles based on frequency and severity of each issue. The constellation of factors influencing SRPS varies by life stage and location. Overall, sanitation behaviors that were most restricted (i.e., menstruation) were the most stressful. Women in different sites encountered different stressors, and the level of perceived severity varied based on site and life stage. Understanding the influence of place and life stage on SRPS provides a nuanced understanding of sanitation, and may help identify areas for intervention.


Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2010

Maternal behavior and experience, care access, and agency as determinants of child diarrhea in Bolivia

Bethany A. Caruso; Rob Stephenson; Juan S. Leon

OBJECTIVE In Latin America and the Caribbean, Bolivia has the third highest rate of mortality among children under five years of age (57 per 1 000), with 14.0% of under-five deaths attributable to diarrhea. Because a childs world is predominantly controlled by and experienced through his or her mother, this investigation aims to understand what maternal dimensions may determine child diarrhea. METHODS Variables were selected from the 2003 Bolivia Demographic and Health Survey to create indices of three maternal dimensions using principal components analysis: behavior and experience, access to care, and agency. The three indices were included in a logistic regression model while controlling for economic status, maternal education, and residence type. RESULTS A total of 4 383 women who had children less than 5 years old were included in the final sample and 25.0% of mothers reported that their most recent born child had experienced an episode of diarrhea in the 2 weeks before the survey. Mothers with high levels of maternal agency or of high economic status were significantly less likely to report their child experienced an episode of diarrhea than women of low levels. Women with primary education were significantly more likely to report that their child experienced diarrhea than women with no education. CONCLUSIONS High levels of agency have a significant protective effect even when controlling for other factors. Increasing maternal agency could have a positive impact on child health in Bolivia, and future work should aim to understand what accounts for different levels of agency and how it may be strengthened.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2014

Assessing The Impact Of A School-Based Latrine Cleaning And Handwashing Program On Pupil Absence In Nyanza Province, Kenya: A Cluster-Randomized Trial

Bethany A. Caruso; Matthew C. Freeman; Joshua V. Garn; Robert Dreibelbis; Shadi Saboori; Richard Muga; Richard Rheingans

Improving school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) conditions reduces pupil absence and illness. However, these benefits may depend on the conditions of the latrines and availability of consumables. We sought to determine whether a low‐cost, policy‐relevant, environmental‐level latrine cleaning intervention could improve latrine cleanliness, increase its use and reduce absenteeism.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2013

Impact of Regular Soap Provision to Primary Schools on Hand Washing and E. coli Hand Contamination among Pupils in Nyanza Province, Kenya: A Cluster-Randomized Trial

Shadi Saboori; Leslie E. Greene; Christine L. Moe; Matthew C. Freeman; Bethany A. Caruso; Daniel Akoko; Richard Rheingans

We assessed whether supplying soap to primary schools on a regular basis increased pupil hand washing and decreased Escherichia coli hand contamination. Multiple rounds of structured observations of hand washing events after latrine use were conducted in 60 Kenyan schools, and hand rinse samples were collected one time in a subset of schools. The proportion of pupils observed practicing hand washing with soap (HWWS) events was significantly higher in schools that received a soap provision intervention (32%) and schools that received soap and latrine cleaning materials (38%) compared with controls (3%). Girls and boys had similar hand washing rates. There were non-significant reductions in E. coli contamination among intervention school pupils compared with controls. Removing the barrier of soap procurement can significantly increase availability of soap and hand washing among pupils; however, we discuss limitations in the enabling policy and institutional environment that may have prevented reaching desired levels of HWWS.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2015

Partner Incarceration and African-American Women’s Sexual Relationships and Risk: A Longitudinal Qualitative Study

Hannah L.F. Cooper; Bethany A. Caruso; Terrika Barham; Venita Embry; Emily F. Dauria; Claire Clark; Megan Comfort

Racialized mass incarceration is associated with racial/ethnic disparities in HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the US. The purpose of this longitudinal qualitative study was to learn about the processes through which partner incarceration affects African-American women’s sexual risk. Four waves of in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted in 2010–2011 with 30 women in Atlanta, Georgia (US) who had recently incarcerated partners. Approximately half the sample misused substances at baseline. Transcripts were analyzed using grounded theory. For over half the sample (N = 19), partner incarceration resulted in destitution, and half of this group (N = 9) developed new partnerships to secure shelter or food; most misused substances. Other women (N = 9) initiated casual relationships to meet emotional or sexual needs. When considered with past research, these findings suggest that reducing incarceration rates among African-American men may reduce HIV/STIs among African-American women, particularly among substance-misusing women, as might rapidly linking women with recently incarcerated partners to housing and economic support and drug treatment.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2014

Factors associated with pupil toilet use in kenyan primary schools.

Joshua V. Garn; Bethany A. Caruso; Carolyn Drews-Botsch; Michael R. Kramer; Babette A. Brumback; Richard Rheingans; Matthew C. Freeman

The purpose of this study was to quantify how school sanitation conditions are associated with pupils’ use of sanitation facilities. We conducted a longitudinal assessment in 60 primary schools in Nyanza Province, Kenya, using structured observations to measure facility conditions and pupils’ use at specific facilities. We used multivariable mixed regression models to characterize how pupil to toilet ratio was associated with toilet use at the school-level and also how facility conditions were associated with pupils’ use at specific facilities. We found a piecewise linear relationship between decreasing pupil to toilet ratio and increasing pupil toilet use (p < 0.01). Our data also revealed significant associations between toilet use and newer facility age (p < 0.01), facility type (p < 0.01), and the number of toilets in a facility (p < 0.01). We found some evidence suggesting facility dirtiness may deter girls from use (p = 0.06), but not boys (p = 0.98). Our study is the first to rigorously quantify many of these relationships, and provides insight into the complexity of factors affecting pupil toilet use patterns, potentially leading to a better allocation of resources for school sanitation, and to improved health and educational outcomes for children.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2011

Anal cleansing practices and faecal contamination: a preliminary investigation of behaviours and conditions in schools in rural Nyanza Province, Kenya

Shannon A. McMahon; Bethany A. Caruso; Alfredo Obure; Fred Okumu; Richard Rheingans

Objective  To learn how children in rural schools in Nyando District, Kenya clean themselves after defecation.

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