Abstract

Abstract Finite storage capacities of household pit latrines make safely managing fecal sludge a recurring challenge for 2.7 billion people globally. Frequently without guidance from standards or regulation, rural latrine owners choose how to manage their own fecal sludge. However, their intentions – what behavioral science says are the best predictors of future behaviors – when pits fill are poorly understood, inhibiting the development of safe fecal sludge management (FSM) solutions and deteriorating public and environmental health. Using survey data commonly measured by development practitioners, we analyze response frequencies and their associations with contextual factors, such as location, month that the survey was administered, and poverty level. We also use binomial logistic regression to determine if contextual factors can be used to predict the intentions of rural Cambodian latrine owners when pits fill. We found that four in ten rural latrine owners intend to manage their fecal sludge unsafely (41%), and one in six did not have a plan (16%). Desirable FSM intentions increased markedly after rice harvest and varied markedly across provinces. Many predictors of desirable FSM intentions, such as location and satisfaction with the household's latrine, were also identified. Associations between FSM intentions and contextual factors can be used to help predict FSM behaviors and improve FSM service delivery, behavior change campaigns, and product design. However, future work should seek to characterize the complete decision-making processes of rural latrine owners when pits fill. This article has been made Open Access thanks to the generous support of a global network of libraries as part of the Knowledge Unlatched Select initiative.

Highlights

  • James Harper Department of Civil, Environmental and Angela Bielefeldt Amy Javernick-Will Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, College of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1111 Engineering Drive, 428 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0428, USAToeur Veasna Monitoring and Evaluation Manager, iDECambodia, 97A, St

  • The model predicts the fecal sludge management (FSM)-intention desirability of rural Cambodian latrine owners with an accuracy of 67% (Nagelkerke’s pseudo-R2 1⁄4 0.27), while the reduced model predicts with an accuracy of 59%

  • Latrine owners living in rural Cambodia were surveyed to determine their intentions when their latrine pits fill with fecal sludge

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Summary

Introduction

Chris Nicoletti Director of Measurement, Evaluation and Learning, iDE Global, 1031 33rd St #270, Denver, CO 80205, USA. Pit latrines are used daily by approximately 2.7 billion people in rural low-income communities globally and are being installed in record numbers throughout Southeast Asia (Strande ). Such services are frequently unavailable or expensive to rural latrine-owning households (‘latrine owners’ ) (Hussain et al ). Rural latrine owners typically empty their own pits using unsafe behaviors that endanger the pit emptier, community members, and/or the environment via Downloaded from http://iwaponline.com/washdev/article-pdf/10/2/191/713031/washdev0100191.pdf by guest

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