ABSTRACT
Background
Lack of toilets and the widespread practice of open defecation may contribute to India's large burden of child undernutrition.
Objectives
We examine whether a large national sanitation campaign launched in 2014, the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), precedes a reduction in stunting and wasting among under 5-y-old (u5) children in India.
Methods
In this observational study, we used district-level data from before (2013–2014) and after (2015–2016) SBM from 3 national surveys to derive, as our outcomes, the percentage of u5 children per district who are stunted and wasted. We defined our exposures as 1) binary indicator of SBM and 2) percentage of households with toilets per district. Our analytic sample comprised nearly all 640 Indian districts (with ∼1200 rural/urban divisions per district per time point). Linear regression analyses controlled for baseline differences in districts, linear time trends by state, and relevant covariates.
Results
Relative to pre-SBM, u5 stunting declines by 0.06% (95% CI: –0.10, –0.01; P = 0.009) with every percentage increase in households with toilets post-SBM. Rural regions and districts with higher pre-SBM toilet availability show greater decline in u5 stunting post-SBM.
Conclusions
An increase in toilet availability on a national scale, precipitated by the SBM sanitation campaign, is associated with a reduction in undernutrition among u5 children in India over the early phase of the campaign.
Keywords: open defecation, sanitation, child stunting, India, Swachh Bharat Mission
Introduction
India accounts for nearly one-third of the global burden of undernutrition in under 5-y-old (u5) children (1). Stunting (height for age below –2 standard deviations relative to global reference curves) and wasting (weight for height below –2 standard deviations relative to global reference curves) remain alarmingly high among Indian children relative to other countries of similar national economic output (2, 3). This phenomenon, often referred to as the “Asian enigma,” may arise from the extensive practice of open defecation in India (4). Absence of household toilets and low utilization of toilets promote open defecation and contaminate ambient environment and water sources with fecal pathogens. In 2012, nearly half of India's 1.2 billion people reported lack of household toilets and practiced open defecation (5). This indiscriminately strewn human waste serves as one of the most lethal and rampant means for spreading disease.
Open defecation carries a significant negative externality. Persistent exposure to high concentrations of fecal matter elevates the incidence of infections reliant on the fecal-oral route of transmission, particularly among young children (6). Repeated infections of the gut may induce subclinical permeability changes in the small intestine, also referred to as environmental enteropathy. This condition causes malabsorption of nutrients, resulting in chronic undernutrition and stunting (6, 7). Undernutrition among u5 children may “program” future growth (8–11). Sanitation efforts to reduce open defecation may reduce child undernutrition, particularly among u5 children (2). High population density, moreover, may exacerbate the potential effects of open defecation on child health. Improved sanitation may, therefore, hold particular relevance for India (12).
Intriguingly, recent multinational randomized controlled trials in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have not found a relation between open defecation (low toilet use) and growth faltering among children (13–18). Scholars contend that the absence of this relation may arise from low baseline prevalence of open defecation in these countries, which limits their generalizability to India (18–22). In India, studies present mixed findings. Cross-sectional studies report a positive relation between open defecation (or lack of toilet availability) and child stunting (5, 23). Small-scale randomized controlled trials in India show that provision of toilets and behavioral change messaging increase toilet construction, reduce open defecation, and increase child height (24). Moreover, these height gains in u5 children appear within a relatively short time span (24). Research examining India and 3 other LMICs (Ethiopia, Peru, Vietnam) also finds that stunting among children corresponds inversely with access to toilets (except for Vietnam) (25). However, several cluster-randomized controlled trials in Indian villages have found no benefit of toilet access to child health (26, 27). The authors attribute these null results to inconsistent usage of toilets and lack of effective behavioral change interventions (26–28). Longitudinal research examining subnational changes in water and sanitation across 59 countries also reports no changes in child stunting or wasting following sanitation improvements, although a reduction in diarrhea and child mortality has been observed (29). These findings suggest that, absent toilet adoption and usage, increased toilet availability alone may not translate into reduced open defecation and improved child nutrition in India (28, 30–32).
In 2014, the election of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government ushered in the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM) (33). SBM succeeded the former Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan and put forth a national mandate for total sanitation and complete eradication of open defecation by 2019 (33). The government allotted over $1 billion annually toward this program (33). SBM Gramin (SBM-G) is the flagship component of SBM and focuses on total sanitation in rural India under the Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation (33). SBM Urban (SBM-U) focuses on cities and urban clusters and is implemented by India's Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (34). Under SBM-G, rural households are incentivized with a cash subsidy of INR 12,000 (US$170) for toilet construction coupled with intense public messaging (33).
From 2015 to 2020, >100 million household toilets have been constructed in India and >600,000 villages have been declared free of open defecation (33). This national intervention combines toilet construction, waste management, and intensive public messaging, with nearly 10% of all SBM expenditure dedicated to information, education, and communication (IEC) campaigns using a wide variety of channels (social media, cinema, community mobilization, etc.) (33, 35, 36). According to some estimates, the Indian population was exposed to ∼11 sanitation, handwashing, and hygiene-related messages per person per week, sponsored by SBM (35). Studies report, following SBM, a heterogeneous decline in open defecation and increased hygiene awareness in select North Indian states (37, 38). Whereas multiple sources document greater administrative focus and investments made toward IEC and community mobilization toward total sanitation (36, 39), evidence on the large-scale impact of SBM on child health outcomes remains limited.
According to an evaluation in the states of Bihar, West Bengal, and Odisha, villages declared as open defecation free (ODF) following SBM showed marked reduction in fecal contamination relative to non-ODF villages (40). Another study that used data from the Performance Monitoring and Accountability 2020 survey reports, following SBM, a 60% reduction in open defecation among rural and 46% reduction among urban regions of Rajasthan (37). In rural Punjab, a cluster-randomized controlled trial reports a 7% reduction in open defecation, corresponding to ∼6% to 10% increase in toilet ownership following SBM (38). These estimates align with qualitative evidence from other independent evaluations that also report increased toilet adoption in rural North Indian states, owing to increased toilet construction and community and governmental coercion toward use of toilets following SBM (41). We, however, know of only 2 studies that report nationwide evaluations of SBM; neither examine child undernutrition and stunting (42, 43).
SBM represents one of the largest-scale public health campaigns in the second most populous country in the world. For this reason, quantifying the importance of SBM in reducing child undernutrition holds strong policy relevance. Major critiques of Indian sanitation policies that preceded SBM involved nonutilization of constructed toilets and no discernible improvement in child health despite an increase in toilet availability (27, 44). Experts contend that the Total Sanitation Campaign, for instance, failed to mobilize communities and did not emphasize IEC in high-burden states (45). Following SBM, if many newly constructed toilets are now being used, it remains to be seen whether child undernutrition, particularly among u5 children, improves accordingly. We examine, in a longitudinal manner, whether and to what extent an increase in district-level household toilet availability correlates with reductions in percentage of u5 children who are stunted and wasted across all districts in India over the early (i.e., within first 2 y) phase of SBM. The pace of toilet construction and SBM adoption shows considerable variation across Indian states and districts (46). We exploit this geographic variation in the intensity of toilet construction and estimate the relation between SBM-related changes in toilet availability and u5 undernutrition.
Methods
Data sources
We used 3 different publicly available population-level survey data sets in India for our study: 1) District Level Household and Facilities Survey (DLHS), Round 4 (2013) (47); 2) Annual Health Survey (AHS, 2013–2014) (48); and 3) National Family Health Survey (NFHS), Round 4 (2015–2016) (49). These surveys are representative at the district and state levels (47–49). AHS includes 9 “high-burden” Indian states (Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, Orissa, Bihar, Assam, and Rajasthan), and DLHS covers the remaining 21 Indian states/territories for the pre-SBM time period of 2013–2014 (except Gujarat and Jammu and Kashmir). NFHS covers all states/territories over the post-SBM time period (2015–2016). Recent studies have used combinations of these data sets to study cross-sectional and longitudinal changes in health outcomes in India (50, 51). The DLHS, AHS, and NFHS data series have been used in >600 scientific publications, in addition to usage by the World Bank, Government of India, and other policy-making agencies (52). This study used publicly available secondary data and was institutional review board exempt.
Variables
We examined the health outcomes of stunting and wasting among u5 children―2 measures of child undernutrition that may respond to district-level reductions in open defecation. Stunting reflects chronic undernutrition and indicates early, sustained exposure to infections and inadequate diet (53). Wasting reflects acute undernutrition from recent loss in body mass usually following acute starvation and/or severe disease (53). We used child anthropometric measurements (age in months, height in centimeters, weight in kilograms) to construct height-for-age and weight-for-height z scores relative to WHO global reference curves for u5 children (54). Next, consistent with the global practice, we classified children at or below –2 SD of height-for-age z scores as stunted and below –2 SD of weight-for-height z score as wasted (54). We categorized children below –3 SD for these z scores as severely stunted and wasted (respectively) (54). We aggregated the number of stunted and wasted children by district (separately for rural/urban areas, classified based on Indian census definitions) (55) to obtain the prevalence of each undernutrition type. We used the total number of u5 children surveyed as the denominator and applied analytic survey weights to render the population-representative estimates at the district level.
We used 2 exposures that measure the timing and intensity of SBM. We first used a binary (1/0) indicator variable of SBM, coded as “0” before SBM implementation (2013–2014) and “1” post-SBM implementation (2015–2016). Next, we used the percentage of households in a district with individual, unshared toilets1 (total households surveyed as denominator, weighted using survey weights). Given the timing, large magnitude, and broad scope of the SBM campaign, we reasoned that any acute increase from 2013–2014 to 2015–2016 at the district level in having a toilet potentially arises from SBM. We view this assumption as reasonable because, following the launch of SBM, financial allocations for sanitation increased by an unprecedented 24% in the financial year 2014–2015 relative to the financial year of 2013–2014 (56). Indian parliamentary reports indicate that of the 107 million toilets constructed under SBM (until 2020), ∼40% (40,520,686) were constructed by 2016 (57). Nationwide toilet availability also increased dramatically after 2014 (58).
Our final analytic sample (excluding districts with missing data) comprised 1127 district-units pre-SBM (563 rural, 564 urban) and 1264 district-units post-SBM (627 rural, 637 urban). To give the reader a sense of the geographic variation of our exposure and outcome variables, we mapped, across all available districts in India, u5 stunting and availability of household toilets by pre- and post-SBM period. We also graphed the unadjusted linear relation between u5 stunting, wasting, and percentage of households with personal toilets for pre- and post-SBM periods. Next, we graphed national averages of u5 children who are undernourished (stunted, wasted) and percentage of households with personal toilets for 3 time points: 2005–2006, 2013–2014, and 2015–2016.
Empirical estimation
Our test, often referred to as a “difference-in-difference” analysis in the evaluation literature (59), turns on whether the u5 child health outcomes improve above expected levels following districts’ increase in toilet construction from the pre- to post-SBM period. We use ordinary least squares regression to estimate the following equation:
(1) |
where is the percentage of u5 children who are stunted or wasted (separate variables) in district i at time t (pre-SBM, post-SBM) in region r (rural, urban). is the percentage of households with toilets in district i at time t and region r. is a binary variable coded 0 for pre-SBM and 1 for post-SBM. is the main coefficient of interest that represents the interaction between SBM and percentage change (pre- to post-SBM) of households with toilets. Put another way, the parameter estimates the “net association” between SBM-related toilet construction and change in child health outcome. is a vector of control variables comprising district-level aggregates of maternal education (matriculate or 10th grade and above), institutional delivery (hospital birth), child immunization, maternal health care during pregnancy (at least 4 antenatal care visits), households with access to electricity, clean drinking water (boiled, chlorinated, or treated with alum; filtered using electric filters or composite materials), clean cooking fuel (liquid petroleum gas, biogas), and district wealth (deciles) in district i at time t in region r. District wealth deciles were created using methods described by Filmer and Pritchett (60) (excluding electricity, source of water, toilet availability, and cooking fuel as we controlled for these factors separately). These variables control for district-level socioeconomic attributes, access to health systems, and child health correlates other than toilets (61–63). We estimate Equation 1 for the full sample (overall) and stratified by rural/urban regions.
We do not control for diarrhea as it falls on the hypothesized pathway linking poor sanitation (open defecation) to child undernutrition (63). The collection of information on diarrhea, moreover, relies on reporting based on its occurrence in the 2 wk preceding each survey, which makes it an acute rather than chronic outcome and also introduces bias from seasonality (diarrhea is more common during summer/monsoon seasons relative to winter). is the vector of state-specific linear time trends that control for state-specific factors that may vary linearly over time for the duration of our study. Examples of such factors include state-level policies that affect sanitation as well as child undernutrition and state-specific trends in income, health system access, and cultural, dietary norms. is a binary identifier of aggregation level by rural/urban location of households within districts, based on Indian census criteria of population density and predominant type of economic activity (agrarian compared with others). is a vector of district-level fixed effects that accounts for time-invariant attributes of districts that may influence child undernutrition. is the cluster-robust standard error term.
Owing to the distinct nature of SBM-G (rural) and SBM-U (urban), we also estimate Equation 1 for rural and urban units separately. We exclude state-specific linear time trends for the rural/urban stratified regression analyses owing to reduction in sample size (and statistical power) by half, but we retained district fixed effects. We also estimate Equation 1 using only the baseline (i.e., pre-SBM) percentage of households with personal toilets to examine whether baseline toilet availability affected the strength of the relation between new toilet construction and u5 health outcomes. Last, we perform the multiple sensitivity checks to ensure robustness of all findings and to identify potential circumstances in which any discovered SBM campaign “effect” might have been most salient.
Results
Post-SBM, the percentage of households with personal toilets increased by 12% in rural and by 5% in urban areas, relative to pre-SBM (Table 1). Over the same period, the percentage of u5 children who are stunted declined by almost 10% in rural and 7% in urban areas. However, the percentage of u5 children who are wasted stayed nearly constant from pre- to post-SBM. Supplemental Figure 1 shows the scatterplot overlaid with unadjusted linear fit of our exposure compared with outcomes at the district level, by rural and urban regions in India. The slope of the linear fit between percentage of households with personal toilets and u5 stunting is negative and marginally steeper post-SBM relative to pre-SBM for rural districts (Supplemental Figure 1). The percentage of u5 children who are wasted stays nearly constant over pre- and post-SBM in urban districts, although its linear fit with respect to toilet availability post-SBM shows a steeper slope relative to pre-SBM among rural districts (Supplemental Figure 2).
TABLE 1.
Pre-SBM (2012–2013) | Post-SBM (2015–2016) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Variable | Rural | Urban | Rural | Urban |
Sample size | 563 | 564 | 627 | 637 |
Percentage of households with personal toilet | 38.1 (27.9) | 65.1 (16.7) | 46.1 (27.1) | 70.6 (14.9) |
Percentage of u5 children who are stunted | 48.8 (14.0) | 43.7 (17.5) | 37.3 (10.6) | 30.7 (11.4) |
Percentage of u5 children who are wasted | 23.2 (10.3) | 21.8 (12.5) | 20.9 (8.7) | 19.4 (9.8) |
Percentage of u5 children who are severely stunted | 26.4 (12.2) | 23.5 (14.9) | 15.8 (7.0) | 12.7 (7.1) |
Percentage of u5 children who are severely wasted | 10.9 (7.5) | 11.2 (8.7) | 8.0 (5.2) | 8.7 (6.6) |
Percentage of households with clean drinking water | 17.3 (25.0) | 30.7 (26.1) | 22.4 (26.8) | 39.0 (25.7) |
Percentage of institutional deliveries | 68.5 (22.3) | 82.2 (16.0) | 77.3 (18.4) | 87.3 (14.2) |
Percentage of households with clean cooking fuel | 17.2 (19.0) | 60.7 (20.8) | 24.9 (19.4) | 72.7 (17.8) |
Percentage of households with electricity | 65.4 (33.8) | 83.8 (19.2) | 86.0 (16.2) | 96.4 (5.6) |
Percentage of women with at least 10 y of schooling | 21.0 (14.7) | 42.8 (14.2) | 28.9 (14.2) | 49.4 (12.8) |
Percentage of women who reported 4 ANC visits during pregnancy | 41.6 (27.1) | 60.9 (24.2) | 45.3 (32.6) | 67.1 (28.8) |
Percentage of children who received full immunization | 62.7 (9.9) | 65.6 (8.7) | 63.4 (9.9) | 66 (8.7) |
District wealth decile | 4.8 (2.9) | 5.8 (2.9) | 5.2 (2.6) | 6.2 (2.8) |
Values are mean (SD). ANC, Antenetal Care; SBM, Swachh Bharat Mission; u5, under 5-y-old.
Supplemental Figures 3 and 4 map the change in percentage of u5 children who are stunted and percentage of households with personal toilets. Post-SBM, most districts in India show increased toilet availability (Supplemental Figure 3). We also observe a marked decline in u5 stunting in these states post-SBM (Supplemental Figure 4).
The relation between regional toilet availability and u5 stunting in India was constant in the time periods preceding SBM, thus supporting the “constant slope” assumption (Supplemental Figure 5, Supplemental Table 1). Table 2 shows the main results from linear fixed-effects (district-level) regression analyses for stunting and wasting in u5 children, overall and by rural/urban regions. The coefficient of the interaction term (SBM * percentage of households with personal toilets) gives the “net association” of SBM with u5 stunting and wasting. Results from the analysis of the overall sample (inclusive of rural and urban districts) support the hypothesis in that, relative to pre-SBM, stunting declined by 0.06 percentage points per unit (or 1%) increase in household-level toilet availability post-SBM (P = 0.009) (Table 2, model 1). However, there was no change in the percentage of u5 children who are wasted with the change in toilet availability (Table 2, models 2, 4, 6). The decline in u5 stunting concentrates among rural areas (coefficient = –0.05, P = 0.023) (Table 2, model 3). These results underscore the role of SBM-G relative to SBM-U in reducing child undernutrition over our study period (Table 2, models 3, 5). Supplemental Figure 6 provides a “visual” depiction of our interaction test, in which we graph the predicted values of u5 stunting (average marginal effects, based on Equation 1) over incremental values of percentage of households with toilets, for pre- and post-SBM time periods (64). The slope of predicted u5 stunting is steeper over the post-SBM period compared with pre-SBM. This difference in slopes of linear prediction over pre-SBM, relative to post-SBM, illustrates the association between u5 stunting and SBM * percentage of households with personal toilets interaction term (Supplemental Figure 6).
TABLE 2.
Overall sample (inclusive of rural and urban districts) | ||||||
Model 1: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are stunted | Model 2: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are wasted | |||||
Covariates | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value |
Post-SBM (reference = pre-SBM) | 4.57 | −3.18, 12.33 | 0.247 | 1.74 | −6.61, 10.09 | 0.682 |
Baseline (pre-SBM) percentage of households with personal toilet | −0.01 | −0.06, 0.05 | 0.848 | −0.02 | −0.06, 0.02 | 0.380 |
SBM * baseline percentage of households with personal toilet (reference = pre-SBM) | −0.06 | −0.10, −0.01 | 0.009 | −0.01 | −0.04, 0.03 | 0.684 |
Percentage of households with clean water | −0.08 | −0.17, 0.01 | 0.094 | −0.05 | −0.12, 0.01 | 0.091 |
Percentage of households with clean cooking fuel | 0.05 | −0.02, 0.11 | 0.193 | 0.03 | −0.04, 0.10 | 0.458 |
Percentage of households with electricity | −0.05 | −0.11, 0.01 | 0.103 | −0.01 | −0.05, 0.04 | 0.707 |
Percentage of women with at least 10 y of schooling | −0.17 | −0.29, −0.05 | 0.007 | 0.02 | −0.09, 0.14 | 0.663 |
Percentage of institutional deliveries | −0.06 | −0.15, 0.04 | 0.257 | 0.00 | −0.06, 0.06 | 0.940 |
Percentage of women who reported 4 ANC visits during pregnancy | −0.05 | −0.12, 0.02 | 0.182 | −0.03 | −0.08, 0.03 | 0.377 |
Percentage of children who received full immunization | 0.00 | −0.13, 0.13 | 0.985 | −0.01 | −0.12, 0.09 | 0.791 |
District wealth decile | −1.66 | −3.27, −0.05 | 0.044 | −1.57 | −2.75, −0.38 | 0.009 |
Urban (reference = rural) | −0.15 | −2.56, 2.26 | 0.903 | −0.87 | −3.70, 1.96 | 0.548 |
Mean of dependent variable | 39.65 | 33.0 | ||||
Sample size | 2317 | 2310 | ||||
Rural | ||||||
Model 3: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are stunted | Model 4: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are wasted | |||||
Covariates | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value |
Post-SBM (reference = pre-SBM) | −4.67 | −8.00, −1.34 | 0.006 | −6.44 | −10.16, −2.72 | 0.00 |
Baseline (pre-SBM) percentage of households with personal toilet | 0.09 | −0.03, 0.21 | 0.162 | 0.05 | −0.06, 0.16 | 0.36 |
SBM * baseline percentage of households with personal toilet (reference = pre-SBM) | −0.05 | −0.10, −0.01 | 0.023 | −0.03 | −0.08, 0.02 | 0.27 |
Percentage of households with clean water | −0.09 | −0.23, 0.04 | 0.183 | −0.01 | −0.17, 0.15 | 0.89 |
Percentage of households with clean cooking fuel | −0.12 | −0.25, 0.01 | 0.073 | 0.20 | 0.00, 0.40 | 0.05 |
Percentage of households with electricity | −0.07 | −0.13, 0.00 | 0.048 | 0.05 | −0.01, 0.12 | 0.08 |
Percentage of women with at least 10 y of schooling | −0.17 | −0.36, 0.02 | 0.073 | 0.09 | −0.17, 0.34 | 0.50 |
Percentage of institutional deliveries | −0.08 | −0.21, 0.06 | 0.267 | 0.14 | 0.00, 0.29 | 0.05 |
Percentage of women who reported 4 ANC visits during pregnancy | 0.01 | −0.02, 0.04 | 0.337 | −0.05 | −0.08, −0.03 | 0.00 |
Percentage of children who received full immunization | −0.17 | −0.31, −0.03 | 0.015 | 0.00 | −0.15, 0.16 | 0.95 |
District wealth decile | −1.39 | −3.02, 0.23 | 0.093 | 0.15 | −1.68, 1.97 | 0.87 |
Mean of dependent variable | 42.62 | 21.94 | ||||
Sample size | 1169 | 1163 | ||||
Urban | ||||||
Model 5: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are stunted | Model 6: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are wasted | |||||
Covariates | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value |
Post-SBM (reference = pre-SBM) | −6.60 | −15.43, 2.23 | 0.143 | −5.58 | −13.07, 1.91 | 0.14 |
Baseline (pre-SBM) percentage of households with personal toilet | 0.10 | −0.08, 0.27 | 0.284 | 0.01 | −0.12, 0.14 | 0.86 |
SBM * baseline percentage of households with personal toilet (reference = pre-SBM) | −0.03 | −0.15, 0.09 | 0.577 | 0.02 | −0.08, 0.12 | 0.73 |
Percentage of households with clean water | −0.18 | −0.39, 0.03 | 0.088 | 0.01 | −0.12, 0.14 | 0.85 |
Percentage of households with clean cooking fuel | 0.13 | −0.09, 0.35 | 0.235 | 0.04 | −0.15, 0.24 | 0.65 |
Percentage of households with electricity | −0.18 | −0.33, −0.03 | 0.022 | 0.07 | −0.06, 0.19 | 0.32 |
Percentage of women with at least 10 y of schooling | −0.24 | −0.45, −0.03 | 0.024 | 0.04 | −0.12, 0.21 | 0.59 |
Percentage of institutional deliveries | −0.01 | −0.23, 0.20 | 0.917 | 0.07 | −0.08, 0.21 | 0.38 |
Percentage of women who reported 4 ANC visits during pregnancy | 0.00 | −0.06, 0.06 | 0.948 | −0.06 | −0.11, −0.01 | 0.01 |
Percentage of children who received full immunization | −0.05 | −0.27, 0.17 | 0.665 | −0.02 | −0.17, 0.13 | 0.79 |
District wealth decile | −2.18 | −4.73, 0.36 | 0.093 | −2.62 | −4.84, −0.40 | 0.02 |
Mean of dependent variable | 36.63 | 20.49 | ||||
Sample size | 1148 | 1128 |
Outcome for model 1: percentage of u5 children who are stunted in the overall sample (inclusive of rural and urban districts); Outcome for model 2: percentage of u5 children who are wasted in the overall sample (inclusive of rural and urban districts); Outcome for model 3: percentage of u5 children who are stunted in rural districts; Outcome for model 4: percentage of u5 children who are wasted in rural districts; Outcome for model 5: percentage of u5 children who are stunted in urban districts; and Outcome for model 6: percentage of u5 children who are wasted in urban districts. All outcomes predicted as a function of SBM status (post-SBM) and percentage of households with personal toilets per district in India. District fixed effects and state-specific linear time trend covariates not shown. ANC, antenatal care; SBM, Swachh Bharat Mission; u5, under 5 y old.
We also examined whether a district's baseline level of toilets pre-SBM affects the strength of the findings. Table 3 indicates that higher toilet availability pre-SBM corresponds with a greater reduction in u5 stunting (but not wasting) post-SBM (coefficient = –0.05, P = 0.031). This finding suggests that districts with a relatively higher baseline toilet availability showed a greater decline in u5 stunting compared with districts that formerly had a lower percentage of household toilets. In addition, relative to districts at the lowest quartile of toilet availability at the pre-SBM baseline, u5 stunting declines to a greater degree among districts at higher baseline toilet quartiles (Supplemental Figures 7, 8;Supplemental Table 2). Results from Table 3 and Supplemental Table 2 suggest that u5 stunting may exhibit a nonlinear response to an increase in district-level toilet availability. Whereas all the interaction coefficients in Supplemental Table 2 are negative, only the estimate for SBM * third quartile reaches conventional levels of statistical significance for u5 stunting (Supplemental Table 2, model 1). In our data, districts at the third quartile of baseline toilet availability show a mean of 64% (percentage of households with personal toilets) pre-SBM. Within these districts, the mean percentage of households with personal toilets increases to 72% post-SBM. These patterns indicate that increasing toilet availability to >70% may likely elicit reductions in u5 stunting. This nonlinear association has also been observed in other studies and suggests that improvements in child undernutrition may correspond with achievement of sanitation coverage “thresholds,” underscoring the negative externality of open defecation (28, 65, 66).
TABLE 3.
Model 1: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are stunted | Model 2: Outcome = percentage of u5 children who are wasted | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Covariates | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value | Coefficient | 95% CI | P value |
Post-SBM (reference = pre-SBM) | 4.47 | −2.70, 11.65 | 0.222 | 1.34 | −5.27, 7.94 | 0.692 |
Baseline (pre-SBM) percentage of households with personal toilet | −0.01 | −0.07, 0.04 | 0.665 | −0.03 | −0.08, 0.01 | 0.141 |
SBM * baseline percentage of households with personal toilet (reference = pre-SBM) | −0.05 | −0.09, 0.00 | 0.031 | 0.00 | −0.04, 0.04 | 0.978 |
Percentage of households with clean water | −0.09 | −0.18, 0.00 | 0.047 | −0.07 | −0.14, 0.00 | 0.064 |
Percentage of households with clean cooking fuel | 0.06 | −0.01, 0.13 | 0.104 | 0.03 | −0.04, 0.10 | 0.443 |
Percentage of households with electricity | −0.06 | −0.11, 0.00 | 0.059 | −0.01 | −0.05, 0.04 | 0.787 |
Percentage of women with at least 10 y of schooling | −0.20 | −0.31, –0.08 | 0.001 | 0.05 | −0.06, 0.16 | 0.366 |
Percentage of institutional deliveries | −0.05 | −0.15, 0.04 | 0.286 | −0.02 | −0.08, 0.05 | 0.604 |
Percentage of women who reported 4 ANC visits during pregnancy | −0.06 | −0.12, 0.01 | 0.094 | −0.03 | −0.08, 0.02 | 0.283 |
Percentage of children who received full immunization | 0.04 | −0.09, 0.16 | 0.554 | −0.01 | −0.11, 0.08 | 0.766 |
District wealth decile | −1.62 | −3.21, –0.02 | 0.047 | −1.76 | −3.04, –0.47 | 0.007 |
Urban (reference = rural) | 0.21 | −2.33, 2.76 | 0.869 | −0.50 | −3.48, 2.48 | 0.741 |
Mean of dependent variable | 39.65 | 33.0 | ||||
Sample size | 2317 | 2310 |
Outcome for model 1: percentage of u5 children who are stunted; Outcome for model 2: percentage of u5 children who are wasted. All outcomes predicted as a function of SBM status (post-SBM) and baseline (pre-SBM) percentage of households with personal toilets per district in India interaction term. District fixed effects and state-specific linear time trend covariates not shown. ANC, antenatal care; SBM, Swachh Bharat Mission; u5, under 5 y old.
Exploratory age group-specific analyses suggest that the overall decline in u5 stunting reported in Table 2 concentrates among the ≥2-y (i.e., 2-y to 4-y, 11-mo-old) age group (Supplemental Table 3). We observe no statistically detectable relations between age group-specific wasting and percentage of households with toilets. In addition, when examining extremely adverse health outcomes, the increase in household toilets post-SBM corresponds with a reduction in severe u5 stunting (very small magnitude of coefficient observed in relation to severe u5 wasting) (Supplemental Table 4).
Last, we reestimated our main equation but used odds of u5 health as the outcome at the individual level instead of at the aggregate district level. In addition to covariates specified in Equation 1, these individual-level analyses also controlled for month of birth and month of survey (Supplemental Table 5). Inference remains similar to the main results in that we observe SBM-related reduction in the odds of u5 stunting (Supplemental Table 5, model 1). However, contrary to our other analyses (but in alignment with Supplemental Figure 2), individual-level estimations also show a decline in the odds of wasting among u5 children (Supplemental Table 5, model 2).
Whereas the magnitude of our estimates appears modest, we deem these findings as plausible in light of prior work that reports qualitatively similar results from smaller-scale experimental analyses (24, 28). To give the reader a sense of the magnitude of the findings, we estimated the predicted change in u5 stunting cases following the SBM campaign. About 50 million u5 Indian children were stunted pre-SBM (1). This figure fell by 10% post-SBM (Table 1) with 5 million fewer u5 stunted children in 2015–2016. Of this decline, 0.06% less u5 stunting occurs with each 1-unit (1%) increase in intrahousehold toilet availability post-SBM (based on our results). Application of our discovered coefficient to this stunting decline and the observed increase in toilets (i.e., 0.0006 * 5 million * 8) yields 24,000 fewer u5 stunted children (ranging from 4000 to 40,000 based on 95% CI of interaction term coefficient reported in Table 2) statistically attributable to an increase in toilet availability following SBM. Given the age-specific patterns observed in Supplemental Table 3, we contend that this reduction concentrates among u5 children older than 2 y of age.
Discussion
Relative to other developing countries, India remains an outlier with respect to high undernutrition in general and wasting in particular among u5 children (2, 3). The widespread practice of open defecation among the Indian population appears to explain this anomaly (particularly for stunting) (4), although there is some debate (67). We test whether the early phase (i.e., first 2 y) of a large-scale national sanitation campaign in India—the SBM—corresponds with an increase in household-level toilet availability and concurrent decline in undernutrition (stunting and wasting) among u5 children. Results show that a 1% increase in district-level household toilet availability post-SBM (relative to pre-SBM) correlates with a 0.06% decline in u5 stunting, but we observe no changes in u5 wasting. Reduction in u5 stunting post-SBM appears to concentrate in rural areas.
Intriguingly, whereas the first 1000 d of life (i.e., ages 0–2 y) remain one of the most vulnerable time periods for child growth and development, we find no relation between improved ambient sanitation and stunting in this age group. Our analyses, rather, show reduced stunting among children aged 2–5 y, following increased toilet availability post-SBM. We speculate, post hoc, that this circumstance may arise for 2 reasons. First, other researchers have described “exposure bias”—the attenuation of benefits from postnatal protective factors—as a potential reason for lower statistical detection of associations between child growth and environmental exposures among under 2-y-old children (68). Factors associated with postnatal nutritional insults or benefits may not have manifested fully among children aged 0–2 y, making it difficult to gauge stable relations in statistical tests (68). It is also plausible that accrued effects of environmental exposures (e.g., improved sanitation) over the first 1000 d of life may correspond with reduced stunting among 2- to 5-y-old children, indicating a lagged response that becomes “visible” during later childhood (69). Second, reduced reliance on breastfeeding, increased mobility, and greater exposure to contaminated food, water, soil, and surfaces among 2- to 5-y-old children, relative to those under 2 y old, may also account for our age-specific results (23, 65, 66). We further note that the absence of any relation between stunting and increased toilet availability following SBM among children aged <2 y in our analyses coheres with findings from randomized sanitation trials that report no changes in undernutrition during early childhood (first 1000 d of life) following sanitation improvements in other developing countries (13–19).
To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine one of the largest and current public health campaigns with respect to u5 child health outcomes in a nationally representative, longitudinal manner. Strengths of our study include the timing and variable intensity of toilet construction of SBM across districts. In addition, we use nationally representative data sets encompassing the majority of districts in India. A key aspect of our study involves the use of well-timed survey data sets shortly before and up to 2 y after SBM, which offers a quasi-experimental circumstance and reduces concerns of maturation bias (70). We, moreover, adjust for other important determinants of stunting and wasting among u5 children. Our use of district-level fixed effects and state-level linear time trends further minimizes confounding from inherent regional differences and shared antecedents of child undernutrition across Indian districts.
Limitations include that, as with any nonrandomized study in which the intervention occurred in all regions, we cannot exclude the possibility of unmeasured confounding. We attempted to minimize this possibility in several ways. First, our “difference-in-difference” study design exploits variation in intensity of toilet construction in the 2 y immediately following SBM. Second, inclusion of several district-level covariates known to predict infrastructure quality, economic status, and child growth do not affect inference. Third, we relied on responses from individual surveys, rather than from governmental reports, to capture our key exposure of intensity of changes in toilet construction. Use of the validated survey data minimizes any circumstance in which a third party skewed sanitation and child health statistics to “favor” a result showing SBM effectiveness. Fourth, our extensive sensitivity analyses indicate consistency of results.
However, owing to the observational nature of our study, the potential for confounding from unobserved factors remains. E-value estimates indicate that for our findings to arise from a common confounder, this unobserved confounder would have to account for a simultaneous increase in the exposure and decline in our outcome by at least 1.30 percentage points (71). We control for several key factors that may exhibit such large associations with the outcome and exposure in our analyses (district wealth decile, maternal education, maternal stature through district fixed effects) (72, 73). We, however, do not control for infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices in our ecologic analyses (owing to limited comparability of IYCF measurement methods across our pre- and post-SBM data sets). We encourage future research to use our estimated E-value of 1.30 in subjecting our analyses to test for rival explanations and confounders.
Some scholars note that the widespread use of height-for-age Z score (HAZ) may obscure patterns observed through alternate anthropometric measures such as height-for-age difference (HAD) (74). We encourage future research to examine the role of SBM in reducing HAD using individual-level longitudinal data.
Recent reports suggest that India may have reversed its previous improvements in child undernutrition owing to economic instability and gross domestic product decline between 2016 and 2019 (75–77). Given that wealth plays a key role in child undernutrition, macroeconomic decline owing to policies such as national demonetization may have adversely affected household income and child health outcomes, particularly among low-income households in India (78, 79).
Research finds that toilet ownership does not necessarily correspond with toilet use, particularly in North Indian regions where members of households with toilets may still prefer to practice open defecation owing to religious beliefs about purity, cleanliness, quality of in-house toilets, and long-term habits (31, 32, 80). The practice of caste-based discrimination, or “untouchability,” represents one of the key drivers of persistent open defecation in India (81). Even when private household toilets are available, individuals may not use them owing to cultural perception of cleaning toilets or emptying sewage tanks/pits as impure or unholy activities (31, 32, 81). Disposal of human waste has traditionally been relegated to “lower” castes. Deeply ingrained discriminatory ideology informs widespread personal preferences such that defecating in the open appears preferable to cleaning or managing human excreta, particularly among rural North Indian populations (31, 32, 81). We encourage future research to examine the variation in casteism following SBM's intensive public messaging efforts, in relation to toilet use and child health outcomes. Our study's data sets also are limited in that they do not contain specific information about preference for toilet use.
The observation that greater toilet availability at pre-SBM baseline corresponds with greater reductions in u5 stunting deserves comment. Our results may help explain other studies that have null effects as modest reductions in open defecation are unlikely to have a detectable effect on child stunting. Consistent with Gertler et al. (28), these results suggest that comprehensive interventions like SBM that combine both intensive health promotional nudges and financial subsidies for sanitation construction may be needed to reduce open defecation enough to generate meaningful improvements in child health. We remind the reader that this explanation is post hoc and requires further rigorous refinement and testing.
We do not observe any changes in u5 stunting in urban areas. It is plausible that urban areas, owing to higher population density and potentially greater risk of transmission of fecal pathogens, may require greater investments under SBM-U to improve child undernutrition (12, 63). Concerningly, we also do not observe any decline in wasting among u5 children following increased toilet availability post-SBM. Wasting reflects acute undernutrition and may result from transient food shortage and disease (82, 83). Loss of (or inadequate) muscle mass during periods of nutritional deprivation likely predisposes children to wasting (82, 83). Based on our findings and current literature, we contend that sanitation improvements alone may not be sufficient toward addressing India's high burden of u5 wasting. Concerted efforts toward protein, energy, and micronutrient dietary supplementation may help improve this indicator of undernutrition in Indian children (82, 83).
Conclusion
Our analysis of the introduction of SBM, one of the largest-ever sanitation interventions in terms of scale and funding, indicates that a multifaceted sanitation campaign may have reduced growth retardation in u5 children by a modest magnitude over the early phase of its implementation. We encourage replication of our findings and examination of later time points in the SBM rollout.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgments
The authors’ contributions were as follows––PS and TB: designed the study (project conception, development of overall research plan, and study oversight) and had primary responsibility for final content; PS and MS: conducted data analysis (hands-on conduct of analysis and data collection); TB: provided essential materials; PS, MS, and TB: contributed equally to writing the manuscript and preparing it for submission; and all authors: read and approved the final manuscript.
Notes
Supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (grant 1R03AI135322-01).
Author disclosures: The authors report no conflicts of interest.
Supplemental Figures 1–8 and Supplemental Tables 1–5 are available from the “Supplementary data” link in the online posting of the article and from the same link in the online table of contents at https://academic.oup.com/jn/.
Abbreviations used: AHS, Annual Health Survey; DLHS, District Level Household and Facility Survey; HAD, height-for-age difference; IYCF, infant and young child feeding; IEC, information, education, and communication; LMIC, low- and middle-income country; NFHS, National Family Health Survey; ODF, open defecation free; SBM, Swachh Bharat Mission; SBM-G, Swachh Bharat Mission Gramin; SBM-U, Swachh Bharat Mission Urban; u5, under 5 y old.
Footnotes
DLHS, AHS, and NFHS report household toilet availability based on response to the following question: “What kind of toilet facility do members of your household usually use?” The list of responses (in all 3 surveys) includes a) flush to piped sewer system; b) flush to septic tank; c) flush to pit latrine; d) flush to somewhere else; e) flush, don't know where; f) pit ventilated improved biogas latrine; g) pit latrine with slab; h) pit latrine without slab/open pit; i) twin pit/composting toilet; j) dry toilet; k) no facility/uses open space or field; and l) other. We identified household-level responses (a–i) as indicative of a presence of a toilet in that household. The AHS, DLHS, and NFHS surveys also ask if the reported toilet facility is shared by persons from other households (survey question: “Do you share this toilet facility with other households?”). We only included, in our enumeration, toilets that were not shared with persons from other households/community to develop the exposure (percentage of households with personal toilet). Survey weights for all covariates were retrieved from the AHS, DLHS, and NFHS, respectively.
Contributor Information
Parvati Singh, Program in Public Health, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.
Manisha Shah, Department of Public Policy, Luskin School of Public Affairs, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Tim A Bruckner, Program in Public Health, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA; Center for Population, Inequality and Policy, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.
Data Availability
The data sets underlying this article were derived from sources in the public domain: Annual Health Survey (AHS) India, Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner (India), 2014 (http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011census/hh-series/cab.html); District Level Household and Facility Survey (DLHS-4), 2012–2013. IIPS, International Institute of Population Sciences, Mumbai, India, 2014 (http://www.nrhmmis.nic.in/SitePages/DLHS-4.aspx); and International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS) and ICF, National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4), 2015–2016, Mumbai, India, 2017 (https://dhsprogram.com/pubs/pdf/FR339/FR339.pdf).
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The data sets underlying this article were derived from sources in the public domain: Annual Health Survey (AHS) India, Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner (India), 2014 (http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011census/hh-series/cab.html); District Level Household and Facility Survey (DLHS-4), 2012–2013. IIPS, International Institute of Population Sciences, Mumbai, India, 2014 (http://www.nrhmmis.nic.in/SitePages/DLHS-4.aspx); and International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS) and ICF, National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4), 2015–2016, Mumbai, India, 2017 (https://dhsprogram.com/pubs/pdf/FR339/FR339.pdf).