Developing home cleaning intervention through community engagement to reduce infections and antimicrobial resistance inGhanaian homes
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Nature Research
Abstract
Globally Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) constitutes a health crisis, particularly in developing
countries, where infectious disease are commonly fatal. There is clear evidence for microbial exposure
and infection transmission within the home. Personal and environmental hygiene are the best ways of
reducing household infections thus decreasing the need for antibiotics and consequently diminishing
AMR. Despite this being an obvious step, research eforts to understand the home environment
and its impact on AMR, cleaning and possible interventions on household cleaning are limited. We
combined design and microbiology methods in an innovative mixed-method approach. A traditional
survey design (n= 240), a design ethnography (n= 12), a co-design workshop and a pre-intervention
microbiological dust sample analysis was undertaken to provide insights for codesign workshops
in which new cleaning practices might be developed to minimise any AMR bacteria present in the
household environments located in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana. Microbiological analysis
of household dust showed that 36.6% of bacterial isolates detected were found to carry at least
one resistance to the panel of antibiotics tested. Four scenarios were generated from an economic
segmentation of the survey data. 50 ethnographic insights were ‘presented’ and descriptions of 12
bacteria species that showed resistance to one or more antibiotics (representing 176 bacterial isolates
that showed resistance to one or more antibiotics found in the dust samples) were presented to the
participants in a codesign workshop. An intervention, a new regime of cleaning practices agreed
through the co-design workshop and practiced for thirty days, was made in (n= 7) households. The
high prevalence of multidrug resistance observed in this study indicate the need for antibiotics
surveillance program, not only in hospital settings but also in the household environment. There is,
thus, an urgent need for targeting of interventions at the household level. Activating knowledge
through community engagement in the research helps in increasing public perception and breaking
down the scientist-public barrier
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Research Article