npj Clean Water (Sep 2024)

ATP-based assessments of recent cleaning and disinfection for high-touch surfaces in low-resource shared toilets

  • Graeme Prentice-Mott,
  • Lorna Maru,
  • Alexandra Kossik,
  • Evelyn Makena Mugambi,
  • Cynthia Ombok,
  • Raymond Odinoh,
  • Florence Mwikali,
  • Ruthie Rosenberg,
  • Isaac Ngere,
  • Jennifer Murphy,
  • David Berendes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-024-00380-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Quality improvements and reduction of disease risk for low-resource shared sanitation facilities require cleanliness assessment approaches that are both rigorous and practical. Using Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) bioluminescence testing, we assessed contamination on high-touch (HT) surfaces (inner door handles) at 32 shared toilet sites in Kisumu, Kenya. In public toilets, contamination was lowest after cleaning and disinfection (C&D) with 0.5% chlorine solution (adjusted difference in mean log10 Relative Light Units per 100 cm2 (aDiff): −1.61; CI: −2.43, −0.59), followed by C&D with 0.1% chlorine solution (aDiff: −1.16; CI: −1.77, −0.55). ATP levels were not associated with overall observable toilet cleanliness and had poor agreement with visually assessed HT surface cleanliness. Our findings demonstrate the utility of this field-feasible method for detecting the impact of recent C&D in low-resource shared toilets, a novel setting for ATP cleanliness testing, while also highlighting the importance of using effective C&D procedures and addressing HT surfaces within cleaning protocols.