| Literature DB >> 33758565 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The health of a community depends greatly on the availability of sufficient and clean water. Rural households relying on self-supplied drinking water must take full responsibility for the treatment of their drinking water. Globally, not many inquiries appear to have been carried out to satisfactorily inform us regarding how and why improvements in behavior related to water treatment occur in some selected individuals and not in others. Related investigations in Ethiopia are even fewer.Entities:
Keywords: rural Ethiopia; self-supplied; water treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 33758565 PMCID: PMC7981144 DOI: 10.2147/RMHP.S299671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Risk Manag Healthc Policy ISSN: 1179-1594
Number of Interviews and Focus Groups by Respondent Category
| Respondent Category | Total Conducted | Total Transcribed | Total Analyzed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Focus group discussions | |||
| All-male FGDs | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) |
| All-female FGDs | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) |
| Mixed (male/female) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) | 5 FGDs (35 participants total) |
| Key informant interviews | |||
| Kebele WASH Officers | 5 interviews conducted | 4 transcribed a | 4 analyzed |
| Health extension officer | 6 interviews conducted | 6 transcribed | 6 analyzed |
Note: aOne interview could not be transcribed because recordings were of poor sound quality due to background noise.
Frequency Distribution of Number of Household Water Treatment Options Mentioned by Study Participants During Focus Group Discussions
| Number of Water Treatment Options Mentioned | Frequency | Percentage | Cumulative Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 3 | 2.85% | 2.85% |
| 1 | 32 | 30.45% | 33.25% |
| 2 | 40 | 38.0% | 71.25% |
| 3 | 23 | 21.90% | 93.2% |
| > | 7 | 6.8% | 100% |
Thematic Framework
| Main Themes | Subthemes (Category) | Subcategories |
|---|---|---|
| Individual level factors | Cognitive factors | Awareness of the causes of water-borne diseases |
| Attitudes concerning practice and product | ||
| Perceptions of severity from untreated water | ||
| Subjective Norms and Support for treatment practices | ||
| Self-image | ||
| Emotional Elements | Aesthetics (appearance, smell, and taste) | |
| Distrust of local officials | ||
| House hold level factors | Household means | Affordability of treatment technologies and competing priorities |
| Decision-making balance | Women’s lack of control over household spending | |
| Community level factors | The value that is given for water quality | Community priority for water quality |
| Public actions and resources | Presence of social organizations such as health committees, health clubs, and mothers clubs | |
| Environment and context related factors | Access to products | Trouble free access to products for the treatment |
| Geographic setting and Living nearer to the capital and closer to bus and open road services | ||
| Reliance on external sources | Free water treatment technologies provided by Non-governmental Organizations and Free samples distributed by the local health centers |