Abstract

BackgroundCommunity-led total sanitation (CLTS) is a widely used, community-based approach to tackle open defecation and its health-related problems. Although CLTS has been shown to be successful in previous studies, little is known about how CLTS works. We used a cross-sectional case study to identify personal, physical, and social context factors and psychosocial determinants from the Risks, Attitudes, Norms, Abilities, and Self-Regulation (RANAS) model of behavior change, which are crucial for latrine ownership and analyze how participation in CLTS is associated with those determinants.MethodsStructured interviews were conducted with 640 households in 26 communities, where CLTS had been completed before and compared to 6 control communities, all located in northern Mozambique in 2015. To identify crucial factors for latrine ownership, logistic regression analysis were conducted and mediation analysis were used to analyse the relationship between CLTS participation and latrine ownership mediated by factors identified by the logistic regression analyses.ResultsMediation analysis reveal that the relationship of CLTS participation with probability of owning a latrine is mediated by social context factors and psychosocial determinants. Data analysis reveal that the probability of building a latrine depends on existing social context factors within the village, the behavior of others in the community, the (dis)approval of others of latrine ownership, personal self-confidence in latrine building, and a precise communication of the benefits of latrine ownership during a CLTS triggering event.ConclusionsBy including activities to focus on the mentioned factors, CLTS could be improved. Exemplary adaptations are discussed.

Highlights

  • Community-led total sanitation (CLTS) is a widely used, community-based approach to tackle open defecation and its health-related problems

  • This paper addresses the following research questions: 1. How successful was CLTS in Mozambique: Do more households that participated in CLTS own latrines than households that did not participate in CLTS?

  • To answer the first research question (Do more households that participated in CLTS own latrines than households not having participated CLTS?) we compared frequencies of latrine ownership for four different groups in the sample (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Community-led total sanitation (CLTS) is a widely used, community-based approach to tackle open defecation and its health-related problems. One form of intervention to reduce or eliminate open defecation has gained attention worldwide: community-led total sanitation (CLTS). This set of community-based activities was first introduced by Kamal Kar in Bangladesh in 2000 [1]. The good news is that CLTS is successful in evoking change: people. The results show that many people decide to construct latrines after participating in CLTS, but a high proportion still does not. The conditions under which and how CLTS leads people to decide to construct a latrine remain unclear.

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