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Household latrine use, maintenance and acceptability in rural Zinder, Niger
29
Citations
10
References
2007
Year
Rural DevelopmentRural ResearchEconomic DevelopmentAgricultural EconomicsSustainable DevelopmentRural ZinderSocial SciencesRural StudiesBuilt EnvironmentRural SociologyVisual Latrine InspectionPublic HealthHousingPublic PolicyRural NigerHousehold LatrinesRural PolicyGlobal HealthRural Health
We conducted a survey in rural Niger to assess use, maintenance and acceptability of household latrines one year after a subsidized promotion project. Standard interviews were conducted with 200 randomly selected project participants and a visual latrine inspection. Before the project, 21.5% (43/200) of households had latrines. After the first year, 100% of these households had at least one latrine. Overall, 2577 household latrines were built in the 50 targeted villages. Latrines were 'always' used by 92.5% of adults and 55% of children in the households. The latrines were adequately maintained: superstructure 93%, covers 74.5%, clean 70%. The main perceived advantages of latrine ownership were proximity/easy access (59.5%) and privacy (22.5%). The project demonstrated that the implementation of a household latrine promotion project is acceptable and feasible in rural Niger. Future promotion projects may develop local sanitation expertise and focus on perceived benefits--proximity and privacy--rather than health.
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