Title: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene: Myths Proved and Disproved
1School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
9 August 2011, CARE USA Headquarters
Presenters Malaika Wright, Shadi Saboori
Brooks Keene
2SWASH Basic Facts
School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- What SWASH is a five-year applied research
project started in 2006 - Goal To identify, develop, and test innovative
approaches to school-based water, sanitation and
hygiene in Nyanza Province, Kenya - Partners CARE, Emory University, the Great Lakes
University of Kisumu, the Government of Kenya,
the Kenya Water for Health Organisation (KWAHO),
and Water.org (formerly Water Partners
International) - Where Research and implementation conducted in
Nyanza Province, Kenya
3Why School WASH?
School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- At baseline, approximately 49 of schools
provided drinking water to pupils - Only 11 provided water for handwashing.
- In schools selected, there were 79.5 pupils per
latrine on average (GoK ratios are 251 for
girls, 301 for boys)
4The Three Components Of SWASH
School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- 1) Direct implementation 2) Research 3) Advocacy/
collaborative learning - Direct implementation and research were started
first - Advocacy and collaborative learning were
incorporated later
5School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
The Research Context
- Widely acknowledged need for school WASH
investments - Yet scant evidence base for impact
- Evidence necessary to justify allocation of
scarce resources - Myth vs. fact
6School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
Background and Methods
- Cluster randomized trial 2007-2009
- Base package (45 schools)
- Hygiene promotion Water Treatment
- Base package Sanitation (45 schools)
- HP WT Sanitation
- Water package (25 schools)
- HP WT Sanitation Water
- Control (70 schools) to receive improvements in
third year of project
7School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
8School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- Does school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
interventions make a difference in educational
achievement? - Which kids benefit more from school WASH?
- Can school WASH do more harm than good?
- What types of investments in school WASH yield
the most returns?
9School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- Does school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
interventions make a difference in educational
achievement? - Which kids benefit more from school WASH?
- Can school WASH do more harm than good?
- What types of investments in school WASH yield
the most returns?
10School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- Significant reduction for HWWT (OR0.43) and HW,
WTSan (OR0.47) - Six days less absence per year for girls
- No effect for boys
11School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- Does school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
interventions make a difference in educational
achievement? - Which kids benefit more from school WASH?
- Can school WASH do more harm than good?
- What types of investments in school WASH yield
the most returns?
12School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
13School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
Effect of WASH Helminth Re-infection
- Followed re-infection rates for Ascaris,
Trichuris and Hookworm - Ascaris
- 45 reduction in odds overall even greater among
girls - Trichuris
- No effects
- Hookworm
- Significant reduction in intensity of infection
for boys
14School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- Does school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
interventions make a difference in educational
achievement? - Which kids benefit more from school WASH?
- Can school WASH do more harm than good?
- What types of investments in school WASH yield
the most returns?
15School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
What if key WASH components are missing? Hand
Contamination
- Hand Rinse sampled pupils hands for fecal
contamination - Measured for E. coli
- Compared intervention and control schools
16School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
17School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
What happened?
18School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- Does school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH)
interventions make a difference in educational
achievement? - Which kids benefit more from school WASH?
- Can school WASH do more harm than good?
- What types of investments in school WASH yield
the most returns?
19School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
Reduction in Diarrheal Disease
- Water Package schools showed a 66 reduction in
diarrheal disease and days of illness. - This result was not gender specific.
- There was no effect seen for the Base and Base
Sanitation schools.
20School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
Reduction in Girls Absenteeism
- Significant reduction in girls absenteeism in
schools where hand washing and treated drinking
water were present (irrespective of sanitation
improvement) - Software components must not be overlooked
- Vital recurrent costs (i.e. soap, water treatment
products) must be regularly budgeted and provided
in order to ensure sustainability of WASH services
21School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
22School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
23School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
- 2008 provision of soap over 30 of schools
- 2010 provision of soap under 8
24School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Myths
Proved and Disproved
Sustainability Successes WASH components not
requiring expenditures by schools are still
sustained in a majority of intervention schools
(nearly 3 yrs after implementation) Sustainability
Challenges WASH components requiring expenditure
by schools decreased dramatically (nearly 3 yrs
after implementation)
25Using the Evidence and Learning Advocacy
26The policy environment
- Current and planned investments in school WASH
- Interested development partners
- Many policies
- Low capacity for implementing them
- Corruption in the Ministry of Education
27Advocacy
- 3 High-Level Objectives
- Increase funding for operations and maintenance
costs in schools - Improved monitoring and evaluation for
accountability - Improved knowledge and behavior change
28Specific Policy Goals
- Increase OM Funding 3.30/pupil/year
- Improve ME Downward, decentralized and
supportive - Knowledge and behavior New curriculum
(co-developed with CDC)
29An inside player
30Advocacy Activities
- Learning presentations
- Sign-on letters with other civil society
- Media work
- Submitted policy briefs
- Sustainability charter
- Day to day badgering
- International level publishing in academic
journals, issuing briefing notes and presenting
at relevant fora
31Measuring Our Progress Outcome Mapping
32Monitoring Our Progress (cont)
- Progress Markers
- Expect to see MoE and MoPHS engage SWASH as a
learning partner on school WASH - Like to see MoE, MoPHS, and MoPW adopt
monitoring tools with focus on not only hardware
but also OM of hardware and software, behavioral
change, and indicators of future sustainability. - Love to see MoE increases budget request to MoF
for school WASH software to at least 33
KES/pupil/year and creates an independent budget
line for school WASH software.
33Monitoring Our Progress (cont)
1,2,6 Charles Kanja (in-service department) Briefing him on policy issues where SWASH has interest. Kanja is interested in working with SWASH on training manuals. January 25th, 2011
3 - Kanja his office has a limited budget and cannot support training or printing of the manual SWASH is creating. No budget for for zonal level to do monitoring. January 25th, 2011
34Results to Date
- 3.4 million allocated for sanitary pads for
school girls this year - Piloting and openness to new ME systems,
including agreement on need for unified
monitoring tool between ministries - Doubling of funds for school WASH (840,000/year)
with potentially more to come - Adoption of WASH curriculum and materials for
in-service teacher training - Agreement to develop a school WASH sustainability
charter - International level Uncertain impact
35Thoughts on the Process
- Evidence-based advocacy works
- Getting to scale through learning advocacy (not
direct service delivery) - Trying to do implementation, rigorous learning
and advocacy simultaneously is hard (not
necessary?) - Cant be internally-focused
- In-country policy staff are essential
36For more information, visit our website at
www.swashplus.org.