Abstract

This study assessed sanitation access in rapidly expanding informal settlements in Dar es Salaam (Dar) against eight proposed indicators of hygienic safety, sustainability and functionality, and in relation to the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) ‘improved’ sanitation definition. Information was collected on toilet facility designs, management and functionality through a structured interview and observations at 662 randomly selected residential properties across 35 unplanned, low-income sub-wards of Dar. Trends in access and associations with sharing, occupancy, latrine replacement, income, education and location factors were considered through statistical analyses. Surveyed sub-wards were open-defecation free. While 56% of households used a facility that met the MDG improved technology definition, only 8% had a functional facility that could be considered as hygienically safe and sustainable sanitation. Safe, sustainable, functioning sanitation access was 2.6 times greater among the richest quintile than the two poorest quintiles. Very poor sanitation services among Dar's urban poor arise from widespread lack of access to hygienically safe pit emptying services, unhygienic designs and functionality problems (affecting 67, 55 and 29%, respectively). As new goals and targets beyond 2015 are discussed, these findings may have important implications for defining what constitutes ‘improved’ sanitation for poor populations living in unplanned informal settlements.

Highlights

  • Sanitation is an important foundation for health, economic development and well-being (Bartram & Cairncross ; WSP )

  • This paper presents a detailed assessment of household sanitation facilities in some of the poorest unplanned settlements of Dar es Salaam (Dar), Tanzania’s largest city

  • This study examined sanitation access and equity in Dar es Salaam looking beyond the current Millennium Development Goal (MDG) definition of

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Summary

Introduction

Sanitation is an important foundation for health, economic development and well-being (Bartram & Cairncross ; WSP ). A further limitation is that access within a city is rarely disaggregated spatially and economically (Fry et al ; UNICEF ). The current generalized approach of defining sanitation access as single household use of an ‘improved’ toilet technology (WHO/UNICEF ) may be less appropriate for rapidly growing cities where on-site sanitation technologies such as pit latrines, pour flush latrines and Downloaded from http://iwaponline.com/washdev/article-pdf/4/1/131/384803/131.pdf by guest. Jenkins et al | Beyond ‘improved’ towards ‘safe and sustainable’ urban sanitation

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