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01-Mar-2022

First cohort of Reckitt Global Hygiene Institute fellows will help plug significant gaps in hygiene research

The Reckitt Global Hygiene Institute, a not-for-profit foundation launched in 2020 to generate and fund high-quality, scientific research that addresses the links between hygiene and health, announced (February 17, 2022) the four recipients of its first RGHI Fellowship Program.

The fellows’ research will, over the next three years, contribute to filling the current void in health and hygiene research and help to generate better hygiene practises that could save lives.

Hygiene, according to the World Health Organization, “refers to conditions and practises that help to maintain health and prevent the spread of diseases.” So far, evidence and research on this topic has been lacking, resulting in significant information deficits that have come to the fore amid COVID-19.

Handwashing and sanitisation have been key components in the fight against COVID-19, but how often and for how long has been disputed, as has the investment needed to remedy the deficits in hygiene resources. According to the WHO, 4.2 billion people do not have safely managed sanitation services and 3 billion lack basic hand washing facilities.

“Hygiene is foundational to health and the way we consider hygiene measures needs to be realigned. An increase in evidence around hygiene would help to change policy and prevent people from contracting other diseases,” said Simon Sinclair, Executive Director, RGHI.

Poor sanitation and hygiene can lead to other infectious diseases such as diarrhoea and cholera. Over 525,000 children under five die each year as a result of diarrhoea.

Generating information on the intersection between health and hygiene, Simon Sinclair said, is vital to safeguarding the health and wellbeing of populations worldwide both amid COVID-19 and beyond.

RGHI is focussed on plugging a significant gap in the health research space and improving access to information that will bridge epidemiology, public health, and behaviour change. The aim is to help inform the global health agenda while leading to the adoption of better and more sustainable hygienic practises globally.

 

Selected through an open competitive process, the Institute will support the Fellows as they research topics from how to improve hygiene norms in health care facilities, communities, and schools to how a poultry management intervention in Bangladesh might reduce exposure to poultry faeces.

The four fellows will receive up to three years full time salary, $150,000 in research costs, $15,000 for travel expenses and $15,000 for training and capacity building.

Ian Ross, Research Fellow in WASH Economics at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine commented: “It is fascinating that behaviours which seem so simple, such as handwashing with soap, are actually quite hard to encourage. For economists, a key question is how to invest scarce resources to most efficiently improve outcomes. Efficiency depends hugely on whether uptake and adherence to behaviours are achieved. The fact that so little attention has been given to economic evaluation of hygiene interventions made me want to investigate this.”

Applications are already open for the 2022 fellowship. Those with up to five years of experience post-PhD and researchers already employed by a university or academic research institute are encouraged to apply. Research topics of interest to RGHI include basic research, clinical investigation, epidemiology, behavioural science, sociology, health economics and engineering.

 

First cohort of Reckitt Global Hygiene Institute fellows will help plug significant gaps in hygiene research

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Last Updated: 01-Mar-2022