Abstract

We estimated the costs and benefits of a community-led total sanitation (CLTS) intervention using the empirical results from a cluster-randomized controlled trial in rural Ethiopia. We modelled benefits and costs of the intervention over 10 years, as compared to an existing local government program. Health benefits were estimated as the value of averted mortality due to diarrheal disease and the cost of illness arising from averted diarrheal morbidity. We also estimated the value of time savings from avoided open defecation and use of neighbours’ latrines. Intervention delivery costs were estimated top-down based on financial records, while recurrent costs were estimated bottom-up from trial data. We explored methodological and parameter uncertainty using one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. Avoided mortality accounted for 58% of total benefits, followed by time savings from increased access to household latrines. The base case benefit–cost ratio was 3.7 (95% CI: 1.9–5.4) and the net present value was Int’l $1,193,786 (95% CI: 406,017–1,977,960). The sources of the largest uncertainty in one-way sensitivity analyses were the effect of the CLTS intervention and the assumed lifespan of an improved latrine. Our results suggest that CLTS interventions can yield favourable economic returns, particularly if follow-up after the triggering is implemented intensively and uptake of improved latrines is achieved (as opposed to unimproved).

Highlights

  • Universal access to safely managed sanitation is one of the sustainable development goal targets [1,2]

  • The base-case values for the parameters of the benefits and costs of the community-led total sanitation (CLTS) intervention are presented in Supplementary Materials, Table S2

  • This study suggests that a CLTS intervention could yield a favourable return on investment, with a base case benefit–cost ratio (BCR) of 3.7 and Net Present Value (NPV) of international dollars (Int’l $)1.2 million over a 10-year time horizon

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Summary

Introduction

Universal access to safely managed sanitation is one of the sustainable development goal targets [1,2]. Progress has been slow in sub-Saharan Africa, where access to safely managed sanitation services expanded from 15% to 18% between 2000 and 2017 [2]. By contrast, it increased from 32% to 64% in South Eastern Asia [2]. The community-led total sanitation (CLTS) approach was initiated in Bangladesh in 2000 [3]. It attempts to motivate behaviour change by triggering a collective sense of disgust about open defecation [4]. A core principle of CLTS is not to provide subsidies for latrine construction, but there

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