In Ethiopia's Southern Nations Nationalities and People's Region (SNNPR) an innovative programme has promoted latrine construction and use, hand washing and safe water storage and handling. The intervention is an example of how visionary government leadership can create the political momentum for low-cost sanitation and hygiene (S&H) and reach out to rural communities.
Published on: 15/04/2009
Papers from the Overseas Development Institute, in the UK, and the IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, in the Netherlands investigate the SNNPR approach. The research was undertaken by Ethiopian researchers on behalf of the Research-inspired Policy and Practice Learning in Ethiopia and the Nile Region (RiPPLE) project.
In 2003 the SNNPR Bureau of Health (BoH) began a new community health strategy, including S&H [which aimed] to reach households through paid health extension workers (HEWs) and volunteer community health promoters (CHWs) [and which] promoted latrine construction without any form of subsidy. A combination of political promotion and institutional mobilisation was successful in launching and expanding the regional government's strategy as a ‘movement'.
The key elements of the S&H strategy were designed to be politically attractive and administratively feasible, and were written in non-technical language. The researchers found after the project:
Despite these positive developments, doubts remain about sustainability and some latrines have collapsed [and] many are infested with flies. As CHWs are unpaid and receive little follow-up support or training, many have lost motivation. Higher levels of government have not provided enough technical support or monitored changes in household S&H behaviour.
Aspects of the SNNPR experience which might help improve [sanitation elsewhere] include:
Source: id21, 01 Apr 2009
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