posted on 2018-02-12, 15:08authored byNancy Moilwa, Julie Callet-Pariel, Melanie Wilkinson
Diarrhoeal disease was ranked fifth on the list of causes of premature mortality in South Africa in 2000. High standards of
hygiene and access to safe water and sanitation services can be related to a reduced risk of diarrhea. Based on the understanding
and interpretation of good sanitation, hygiene and related practices in South Africa, all sanitation programmes
and interventions in the country focus to some degree on hand washing practices and behaviours. Health and hygiene
interventions are implemented from the knowledge that hand washing can act as a barrier to several of the transmission
routes of diarrhoeal pathogens. As a result, many sanitation interventions in South Africa begin with a baseline assessment
which includes a review of present sanitation, hygiene and related practices. This paper focuses specifically on the
measurement of one aspect of health and hygiene awareness in South Africa, namely hand washing behaviours. The paper
is a critique of methods used in assessing these household behaviours in two villages in the Mpumalanga Province of
South Africa.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Research Unit
Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC)
Published in
WEDC Conference
Citation
MOILWA, N. ... et al, 2005. A critique of approaches to measuring effective hand washing in Mpumalanga, South Africa. IN: Kayaga, S. (ed). Maximising the benefits from water and environmental sanitation: Proceedings of the 31st WEDC International Conference, Kampala, Uganda, 31 October-4 November 2005, pp. 3-10.
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