The sanitation arc: an alternative examination of WASH behavior change

Author:

VanRiper Froggi1ORCID,Russel Kory C.2ORCID,Tillias Daniel3,Cramer Lori4ORCID,Laporte Jessica5,Lloyd Erica5ORCID,Kramer Sasha5

Affiliation:

1. Oregon State University Environmental Sciences Graduate Program, 2900 SW Jefferson Way, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA

2. Department of Landscape Architecture and the Environmental Studies Program, University of Oregon, 5249 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-5249, USA

3. Fatraka, Cite Soleil, Haiti, 7 Rue Covelsa, Cité Soleil, Haiti

4. School of Public Policy, Oregon State University, 2251 SW Campus Way, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA

5. SOIL, Cap Haïtien, Haiti, 3950 Green Valley School Rd., Sebastopol, CA 95472, USA

Abstract

Abstract A primary goal of the WASH sector is to facilitate transitions from open defecation to improved sanitation. Many residents of low-income countries desire improved sanitation but lack the resources to obtain or maintain access to toilets. For such persons, describing the goal as ‘behavior change’ implies a deficiency in mindset, failing to capture contextual factors affecting sanitation access. Furthermore, household circumstances affect movement both up and down the sanitation ladder, a phenomenon that the sector tends to overlook. This study, based on interviews with 308 former subscribers to Haitian container-based-sanitation service EkoLakay, tracks household sanitation access at four points in time: prior to subscribing, during the subscription period, immediately upon unsubscribing, and at the time of interview. We describe this movement through time as the ‘sanitation arc’. Prior to subscribing, households were more likely to practice open defecation or rely on non-household sanitation, and less likely to have private improved sanitation than the average urban Haitian. This distribution is reversed among former subscribers. Nearly half of former subscribers, however, could not afford continuous access to EkoLakay; 80% of involuntary terminations resulted in loss of access to private improved sanitation, and over one-third of these households reverted to open defecation.

Funder

Schmidt Family Foundation

Inter-American Development Bank

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pollution,Waste Management and Disposal,Water Science and Technology,Development

Reference30 articles.

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