Abstract

This study examined the water and sanitation (WATSAN) situation in Nima and Teshie, Greater Accra Region of Ghana. A number of research instruments and methods of primary and secondary data collection were employed. These were focus group discussions (FGD), field observation, and interviews. Data collected were edited, coded, and analyzed with the aid of Statistical Package for Social Scientists (SPSS) to generate tables. The residents of Nima and Teshie communities reported that they fetched water from a number of sources. Among these sources are Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL) pipe connections, rainwater harvest and hand dug wells for Nima. Contrary to Nima, Teshie had additional sources from tanker services, streams and the sea. The price of various containers of water varied depending on the season of the year, the source of water and storage system. Also, most adult women in Nima do not patronise public toilet facilities. All the FGDs conducted in Nima indicated that residents pay a fee to dispose of their garbage into the public refuse containers but residents do not pay to do so in the Teshie community. It is recommended that the taps should be opened frequently during the day time to ease the acute water supply to the urban poor. The urban poor (especially women and children) should be informed on the proper disposal of solid waste at designated places by providing more refuse containers at vantage points, and appropriate sanitation facilities that would not exclude any group of the society should be designed.   Key words: Urban poor, water, sanitation, waste management, health.

Highlights

  • Providing water for the poor is one of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)

  • Washing of bowls and other utensils was done with seawater

  • The quality of water used by the residents of the two study areas under survey posed great deal of health concern to them

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Summary

Introduction

Providing water for the poor is one of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The aim is to reduce the number of people living in poverty and the proportion of people without access to water and sanitation. More than one tenth of the world’s population still relied on unimproved drinking water sources in 2010 (UNICEF/WHO, 2012). The provision of water and sanitation services in deprived urban settlements is a challenge faced by many developing countries (Boadi, 2004).The lack of these services threatens public health and the integrity of the environment in both peri-urban areas and formal urban areas (McGranahan, 2007; Mulenga et al, 2004). Accessibility to improved drinking water sources look encouraging, only

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