Making pathogen hazards visible: a new heuristic to improve sanitation investment efficacy Mitchell, C. et al. (2016)

The public health objective of sanitation is to reduce the risk of negative health outcomes from faecal contamination. For water-based sanitation systems at the household and community scale as practised in Indonesia and perhaps elsewhere, the liquid component of the effluent comprises a significant pathogen hazard. While increasing attention is paid to managing the solid fraction, the hazard in the liquid fraction goes largely unnoticed and unmanaged. This paper proposes the means for a conceptual shift to a focus on the pathogen hazards that matter post-treatment, and where those hazards enter the environment, enabling improved local risk management. Firstly, the paper proposes exponential, rather than arithmetic, representations of pathogen number or concentration, because arithmetic representations of treatment efficacy wrongly suggest low cause for concern. Secondly, the paper introduces and applies the Pathogen Hazard Diagram, a new heuristic applicable at both the local and national scale, that requires only local knowledge and general sanitation reference knowledge to construct, but which can guide policy and action, direct monitoring, and improve the efficacy of sanitation investments.

Bibliographic information

Mitchell, C. et al. (2016). Making pathogen hazards visible: a new heuristic to improve sanitation investment efficacy Practical Action Publishing

Filter / Tags

English

Related Countries

Downloads

Making pathogen hazards visible: a new heuristic to improve sanitation investment efficacy


Type: application/pdf
Size: 1.06 MB

Download

Making pathogen hazards visible: a new heuristic to improve sanitation investment efficacy

Published in: 2016
Pages: 18

Publisher:
Practical Action Publishing

Author(s):
Mitchell, C. et al.

Uploaded by:

Stay in Touch Become a Member

Register for free as a SuSanA member to engage with thousands of sanitation enthusiasts on the forum, join working groups, and explore regional chapters.

Subscribe

Are we allowed to crumble with cookies and anonymous tracking?

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site (so called session cookies), while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). We use the application Matomo and the external service etracker to analyze your behavior on our website anonymously. Because we value your privacy, we are here with asking your permission to use the following technologies. You can change your settings any time via this link or the menu item in footer menu. For more information visit our Data Policy