| Literature DB >> 25479768 |
Fabien Munyaneza1, Lisa R Hirschhorn, Cheryl L Amoroso, Laetitia Nyirazinyoye, Ermyas Birru, Jean Claude Mugunga, Rachel M Murekatete, Joseph Ntaganira.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have become an important tool in monitoring and improving health services, particularly at local levels. However, GIS data are often unavailable in rural settings and village-level mapping is resource-intensive. This study describes the use of community health workers' (CHW) supervisors to map villages in a mountainous rural district of Northern Rwanda and subsequent use of these data to map village-level variability in safe water availability.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25479768 PMCID: PMC4320544 DOI: 10.1186/1476-072X-13-49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Geogr ISSN: 1476-072X Impact factor: 3.918
Figure 1Location of the study area as well as its topography, sectors, cells, and villages. A: location of Rwanda in Africa, B: location of Burera district as one of 30 district of Rwanda, C: Burera district subdivisions; 17 sectors, 69 cells and 573 villages, and the Digital Elevation Modal (DEM) showing elevation and terrain of Burera district.
Figure 2Villages mapped by quarter. A: 125 villages (three sectors) in quarter two of 2011 (April – June). B: 220 villages (six sectors) in quarter three of 2011 (July – September). C: 116 villages (four sectors) in quarter four 2011 (October – December). D: 112 villages (four sectors) in quarter one of 2012 (January - March). E: Total of 573 villages of 17 sectors in four quarters.
Figure 3Drinking water distributions by village and sector. A: The dot represented the location of villages while the size of dot was proportion to the number of population in the village. The dots in green color represented safe water while dots in red color represented unsafe water. Area in yellow was a one kilometer Euclidian distance from lake in blue and wetland in green and while lines. B: Represented the percentage of population using safe drinking water by sector which decreased from green to yellow and red, from 100% (the highest) to 32% (the lowest).
Cost of the intervention using CHW supervisors compared to GIS team of PIH/IMB
| Cost category | Items counted in costing | Mapping by CHW supervisors | Mapping by GIS team of PIH/IMB | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USD | % | USD | % | ||
| Trainings and orientation | Training manual, room, training materials, meals, refreshment, transport and certificates | 4,335 | 15% | 72 | 0% |
| Data collection and mapping | Salary GIS coordinator and assistant, hiring GIS assistant, salary CHW supervisors/5 days, transport (vehicle, fuel, and driver), motorcycle rental, meals, communication, accommodation, software (one year license of Arc GIS), laptops, rain coats, GPS devices* | 20,166 | 68% | 54,988 | 91% |
| Validation (sector & district levels) | Transport, per diem, meals, refreshment, printing | 3,345 | 11% | 3,397 | 6% |
| Dissemination | Printing, lamination, transport and per diem | 1,846 | 6% | 1,655 | 3% |
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*GPS devices which were shared by the mappers.