Can Intense Exposure to Hand-Washing and Hygiene Information Campaigns Affect Children's Socio-Emotional Skills?

Hygiene information and practices play a critical role in preventing diseases, particularly among children. Hygiene behaviors practiced in the household have been linked to development outcomes such as socio-emotional skills. This paper exploits data from impact evaluation surveys of a hygiene information campaign conducted in Senegal, where the randomized design suffered from contamination between comparison groups. The variations in exposure and intensity to hygiene information campaigns captured in the surveys were used to understand contamination biases. Such variations were interacted with the presence of household communication assets to explore potential effects on children’s socio-emotional scores. In the presence of contamination biases, the study exploited the longitudinal sample of children in the surveys to reduce time-dependent biases. For robustness, statistical matching was applied between the impact evaluation surveys and Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in 2008 and 2011. Socio-emotional outcomes were the imputed into Demographic and Health surveys to expand sample sizes. By applying matching techniques and imputing outcomes into a larger sample, impacts were non-negligible. Double-difference estimates showed that children’s socio-emotional scores were higher when intervention status was interacted with the presence of communication assets within households. Without the presence of communication assets in the households the impacts were close to zero. Evaluating the effect of hygiene campaigns on children’s socio-emotional skills is challenging because of the biases from contamination that exist when information flows between comparison groups. Targeted hygiene information to the poorest households is relevant for reducing risks of recurrent infections and enables better conditions for socio-emotional development of children.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Briceno, Bertha, Borja-Vega, Christian, Garcia, Vicente
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-11
Subjects:SKILLS, SANITATION, WATER QUALITY, CHILD HEALTH, INFERENCE, CAREGIVERS, RISKS, WASHING HANDS, PEOPLE, ILLITERACY, EARLY LEARNING, SCHOOLING, PREVENTION, HAND WASHING, EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT, ACTIVITIES, BIAS, GROUPS, HEALTH EDUCATION, STRATEGIES, SOCIAL BEHAVIOR, HEALTH, WASHING, SAFE WATER, HEALTH PRACTICES, CAUSAL ATTRIBUTION, DISINFECTION, SOAP, LANGUAGE, ATTRIBUTION, PUBLIC HEALTH, HYGIENE PRACTICES, LITERACY, KNOWLEDGE, COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, PERSONAL HYGIENE, IMAGINATION, IRON, INFECTIOUS DISEASES, HYGIENE BEHAVIORS, SOCIAL SKILLS, INTERVENTION, ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT, HEALTH INDICATORS, ABILITY, CHILD DEVELOPMENT, MARKETING, LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES, MATURATION, LEARNING, CHILD DISEASES, COGNITIVE OUTCOMES, RECALL, MENTAL HEALTH, MORTALITY, NEWSPAPERS, HEALTH PROMOTION, DISEASE INCIDENCE, COGNITION, NUTRITIONAL STATUS, HYGIENE HABITS, INFORMATION CAMPAIGNS, HYGIENE BEHAVIOR, BELIEFS, EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT, STUDY, DEVELOPMENTAL STAGES, WORKERS, BASIC HYGIENE, SCIENCE, AGED, EMPATHY, HABITS, INFLUENZA, VALUES, SCHOOLS, HANDS WITH SOAP, PARTICIPATION, CONTROL GROUPS, BEHAVIORAL CHANGE, AGE, CHILDHOOD, HEALTH POLICY, WATER SANITATION, COMPETENCE, HEALTH OUTCOMES, DIARRHEA, HYGIENE PROMOTION, HYGIENE, ACHIEVEMENT, EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT, EFFORT, CAMPAIGNS, EARLY CHILDHOOD, HEALTH BEHAVIOR, MEASUREMENT, SPEECH, NUTRITION, COGNITIVE ABILITY, YOUNG CHILDREN, HANDWASHING, MOTOR SKILLS, INTERNET, RISK FACTORS, WEIGHT, PERCEPTION, EDUCATION PROGRAMS, COGNITIVE SKILLS, UNDERSTANDING, CHILDREN, EDUCATION, SKILL DEVELOPMENT, DRINKING WATER, INVESTMENT, PLAYING, RURAL AREAS, CLEAN WATER, HYGIENE PROMOTION PROGRAMS, EXPERIENCE, INFANTS, ATTENTION, CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT, INTERACTIONS, AGE COHORT, COMMUNICATION, QUALITY ASSURANCE, COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS, INTERVENTIONS, STRATEGY, POOR HYGIENE, FAMILIES, WOMEN, MEMORY, INFANCY, INTESTINAL PARASITES, COMMUNICATION SKILLS, COMMUNICATION DISORDERS, HEALTH AND HYGIENE, WATER DISINFECTION, BEHAVIOR CHANGE, IMPLEMENTATION, HABIT FORMATION, CONTAMINATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25247175/can-intense-exposure-hand-washing-hygiene-information-campaigns-affect-childrens-socio-emotional-skills-evidence-senegal
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/23433
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