In January 2020, the COVID-19 appeared in the city of Wuhan, China marking the beginning of a global pandemic.[1] The disease is caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSCoV2) which has person-to-person transmission qualities common to many respiratory viral infections.[2]
The virus is picked up by the hands from contact with people and fomites, and transferred from the hands to the eyes, nose or mouth.[3] In confined spaces, it may be carried in aerosolized, speech droplets. [4] The prevalent public health messages about the prevention of transmission are consistent with our understanding of droplet infections (e.g., [5]).
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Wash hands regularly with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand sanitizer;
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Avoid touching eyes, nose and mouth;
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Cover your mouth and nose with your bent elbow or tissue when you cough or sneeze and then dispose of the used tissue immediately and wash your hands;
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Maintain at least 1 meter (in some advice 2 meters [6]) distance between you and others;
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Avoid crowded places;
There is additional advice for those who develop symptoms of COVID-19 infection or have been in close contact with someone with COVID-19. The additional advice focuses on physical isolation. [7, 8]
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Do not leave your home for any reason;
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Remove vulnerable people from the household, and if that is not possible “stay away from them as much as possible”;
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Do not share towels;
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clean objects and surfaces you touch often;
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clean a shared bathroom each time you use it.
The combined messaging can be reduced to the need for (i) space, distance and isolation, (ii) water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), and (iii) behavioral cough/sneeze etiquette. The third element of the message is broadly about individual behavior whereas the first two elements (space, distance and isolation, and WASH) are structural in nature. Structural elements are classically associated with a sociological literature around “structure and agency”, and the social determinants of health literature. [9, 10] An individual may intend to distance himself or herself and engage in appropriate hygiene but if the structural support is unavailable, the intention alone is insufficient.
Urban slums have been identified as potential hotspots for the spread of COVID-19, [11] and have been identified as reservoirs for the spread of other viral respiratory infections. [12] There is an obviousness to that identification: slums are crowded and poor, with a lack of access to basic utilities. [13] Notwithstanding the “self-evident” nature of the risk factors, there has been no quantification of those risk factors. Furthermore, slums are not homogenous urban spaces and the risk factors are unlikely to be distributed uniformly across the population of residents. [14] One might imagine, for instance, that those households that are more crowded are also less likely to have easy access to water for bathing and general hygiene.
The lack of empirical work in this area is unsurprising given the speed with which the pandemic has evolved. We identified only one review article of COVID-19 and slums,[15] and there were a few papers on preprint servers. None of the papers, however, utilized individual or household level data to quantify the presence of risk factors, or their co-occurrence.
In this research we examine the relationship between crowding and access to WASH facilities, with a working hypothesis that there is an inverse relationship such that more crowded living conditions are also associated with poorer access to WASH.