| Literature DB >> 28851334 |
Farzana Yeasmin1, Stephen P Luby2,3, Ronald E Saxton4, Fosiul A Nizame2, Mahbub-Ul Alam2, Notan Chandra Dutta2, Abdullah-Al Masud2, Dalia Yeasmin2, Anita Layden5, Habibur Rahman6, Rachel Abbott4, Leanne Unicomb2, Peter J Winch4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bangladesh faces daunting challenges in addressing the sanitation needs of its urban poor. Maintaining the cleanliness and functionality of communal toilets is dependent upon periodic emptying of fecal sludge, and cooperation between users of communal toilets. Trash disposal into latrines can block the outflow pipes, rendering the toilets non-functional.Entities:
Keywords: Communal toilets; Fecal sludge management; Low-income community; Toilet functionality; Urban sanitation; Waste disposal
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28851334 PMCID: PMC5576109 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4693-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Description of hardware used for pilot toilet waste disposal intervention
Fig. 2Sample of behavior change communication materials
Summary of data collection procedures
| Phase | Method (sample) | Main objective | Type of data collected |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| (10) In-depth interviews (5 Vacutug operators; 3 female residents with child <2 years; 2 male residents with child <2 years) | To explore knowledge, perceptions, reported practices and barriers to fecal sludge management and waste disposal | Demographic characteristics of respondents, problem of usage toilet, existing practice of toilet use, way to keep toilet clean |
|
| (6) Focus group discussions (13 male residents/landlords; 12 female residents/landlords; 14 children) | To refine and select final behavior change communications and hardware for pilot intervention | How to improve the messages and the materials: content, characteristics and understandability of messages and size, color, shape, benefits of hardware |
|
|
| To explore knowledge, perceptions, reported practices and barriers to keep toilet clean, and to identify problems in using waste bin and practices for emptying and maintaining the bin | Knowledge and practice of waste disposal, attitude toward disposing waste in bin, barrier of using bin, motivational affect in promoting disposal of waste in bin |
Toilet user and bin cleaner perceptions of pilot intervention
| Benefits at both sites | Barriers at both sites |
|---|---|
| + Reduced toilet blockages | - Certain items (sanitary napkins, condoms) require wrapping before disposal to prevent user shame and caretaker disgust |
| Perceptions specific to Bauniabad (Ash-colored plastic bin with foot pedal to open it) | Perceptions specific to Kolyanpur (Blue-colored bin with lid without foot pedal) |
| + Foot pedal prevents disgust of having to touch lid with hands | + Bin color is attractive and noticeable reminder to use |
Implications for design of interventions to promote cleanliness of communal toilets, organized around the three dimensions in the IBM-WASH model
| Dimension in the IBM-WASH model | Implications for intervention design |
|---|---|
| Contextual dimension in the IBM-WASH model | |
| Contextual-level barriers | • Low-cost hardware and behavior change interventions can promote appropriate waste disposal practices and facilitate safe fecal sludge removal |
| Psychosocial dimension in the IBM-WASH model | |
| Psychosocial-level barriers | • Promote disposal of items used for menstrual management in a closed bin |
| Psychosocial-level facilitators | • In areas where hardware theft is a concern, messages should emphasize toilet cleanliness as a shared value to build collective efficacy to maintain the good condition and location of waste bins |
| Technology dimension in the IBM-WASH model | |
| Technological-level barriers | • Waste bins were conveniently located to facilitate habitual use; |