Valuing an Index of Sanitation Related Quality of Life (SanQoL-5) in urban Mozambique – a Discrete Choice Experiment

Author:

Katana Patrick V.1,Banze Neiva2,Manhiça Cremildo2,Cubai Catildo2,Viera Lucia2,Fulai Edi2,Cumming Oliver1,Viegas Edna2,Capitine Igor2,Ross Ian1

Affiliation:

1. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK

2. Instituto Nacional de Saúde, Mozambique

Abstract

Abstract

Objectives 1.5 billion people live without basic sanitation. A five-attribute index of sanitation-related quality of life (SanQoL-5) designed for economic evaluation has now been applied in six countries. After rescaling, scores range 0 (no sanitation capability) to 1 (full sanitation capability). To date, SanQoL-5 valuation has been via simple methods such as rank sum, not robust methods such as discrete choice experiment (DCE). We aimed to value the SanQoL-5 index using a DCE in urban Mozambique. Methods We enrolled 601 adults in the cities of Maputo and Dondo, sampling women and men equally alongside quotas for toilet type. The DCE task was a choice between two scenarios representing combinations of SanQoL-5 attribute levels (always, sometimes, never). Each respondent completed 10 tasks and a dominance test. We fitted a mixed logit model and rescaled coefficients to derive the index, with sub-group analysis by gender. Results The highest-valued attribute was disgust (“never feel disgusted while using the toilet”), with a SanQoL-5 index value of 0.25. The other attributes had similar values (ranging 0.18–0.19). People valued “sometimes” levels at around 60% of “never” levels. Mean SanQoL-5 by toilet type followed a gradient with Sustainable Development Goal 6 categories: “open defecation” 0.30, “unimproved” 0.45, “limited” 0.60 and “at least basic” 0.70. Conclusions This is the first DCE-based valuation of any index of sanitation-related quality of life, enabling the SanQoL-5 to be used in economic evaluation. Identifying sanitation service transitions associated with the greatest quality of life gains could inform more efficient resource allocation.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference37 articles.

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3. How does sanitation influence people's quality of life? Qualitative research in low-income areas of Maputo, Mozambique;Ross I;Soc Sci Med,2021

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