Abstract

Water safety planning is an approach to ensure safe drinking-water access through comprehensive risk assessment and water supply management from catchment to consumer. However, its uptake remains low in rural areas. Participatory mapping, the process of map creation for resource management by local communities, has yet to be used for rural water safety planning. In this mixed methods study, to evaluate the validity of participatory mapping outputs for rural water safety planning and assess community understanding of water safety, 140 community members in Siaya County, Kenya, attended ten village-level participatory mapping sessions. They mapped drinking-water sources, ranked their safety and mapped potential contamination hazards. Findings were triangulated against a questionnaire survey of 234 households, conducted in parallel. In contrast to source type ranking for international monitoring, workshop participants ranked rainwater's safety above piped water and identified source types such as broken pipes not explicitly recorded in water source typologies often used for formal monitoring. Participatory mapping also highlighted the overlap between livestock grazing areas and household water sources. These findings were corroborated by the household survey and subsequent participatory meetings. However, comparison with household survey data suggested participatory mapping outputs omitted some water sources and landscape-scale contamination hazards, such as open defecation areas or flood-prone areas. In follow-up visits, participant groups ranked remediation of rainwater harvesting systems as the most acceptable intervention to address hazards. We conclude that participatory mapping can complement other established approaches to rural water safety planning by capturing informally managed source use and facilitating community engagement.

Highlights

  • Water safety planning is an approach to ensuring safe water access through comprehensive risk assessment and management at all water supply stages from catchment to consumer [1], promoted by the World Health Organization (WHO) [2]

  • We aim to evaluate the validity of participatory mapping outputs for rural water safety planning in western Kenya, focussing on the community supply description and hazard identification stages of safety planning

  • Comparison with the questionnaire survey suggested that participatory mapping outputs omitted some water sources and landscape-scale contamination hazards

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Summary

Introduction

Water safety planning is an approach to ensuring safe water access through comprehensive risk assessment and management at all water supply stages from catchment to consumer [1], promoted by the World Health Organization (WHO) [2]. Water safety planning entails the systematic identification of hazards between catchment and point-of-use within a water supply system and their management through identification of critical control points necessary for making that source safe for human consumption, documented via a Water Safety Plan (WSP). It was initially developed for urban utilities, but even in urban areas, its uptake has been slow globally [3]. This complex picture of multiple water source use presents further challenges for rural water safety planning, since sources used sporadically or for specific purposes may be informally managed and omitted from water point inventories [11], despite their potential public health significance

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