BACKGROUND: Health improvements realized through sanitation are likely achieved through high levels of facilities utilization by all household members. However, measurements of sanitation often rely on either the presence of latrines, which does not guarantee use, or respondent-reported utilization of sanitation facilities, which is prone to response bias. Overstatement of sanitation metrics limits the accuracy of program outcome measures, and has implications for the interpretation of related health impact data. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study of 213 households in 14 village water, sanitation and hygiene committee clusters throughout rural Bangladesh and used a combined data- and relationship-scale approach to assess agreemen...
BACKGROUND: In rural Bangladesh, India and elsewhere, pour-flush pit latrines are the most common sa...
To prevent diseases associated with inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene, people needing latrines ...
This is a report on a study of 53 Bangladesh unions declared “100% sanitized” more than 4.5 years ea...
Background: Health improvements realized through sanitation are likely achieved through high levels ...
Background: Health improvements realized through sanitation are likely achieved through high levels ...
Although large-scale programs, like India's Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC), have improved latrine c...
Although large-scale programs, like India\u27s Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC), have improved latrin...
Sanitation programme monitoring is often limited to latrine access and coverage, with little emphas...
Household surveys in Bangladesh between 1994 and 2009 assessed sanitation access using questions tha...
It is recognised that health outcomes in people, and children in particular can be affected by impro...
BACKGROUND: Despite health benefits of sanitation, an estimated 12% of the global population practic...
BACKGROUND: Faced with a massive shortfall in meeting sanitation targets, some governments have impl...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring of sanitation programs is often limited to sanitation access and coverage, ...
BACKGROUND: An estimated 2.4 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation and 946 million...
BACKGROUND: Our group conducted a cluster-randomised trial in 100 villages of Orissa, India to measu...
BACKGROUND: In rural Bangladesh, India and elsewhere, pour-flush pit latrines are the most common sa...
To prevent diseases associated with inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene, people needing latrines ...
This is a report on a study of 53 Bangladesh unions declared “100% sanitized” more than 4.5 years ea...
Background: Health improvements realized through sanitation are likely achieved through high levels ...
Background: Health improvements realized through sanitation are likely achieved through high levels ...
Although large-scale programs, like India's Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC), have improved latrine c...
Although large-scale programs, like India\u27s Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC), have improved latrin...
Sanitation programme monitoring is often limited to latrine access and coverage, with little emphas...
Household surveys in Bangladesh between 1994 and 2009 assessed sanitation access using questions tha...
It is recognised that health outcomes in people, and children in particular can be affected by impro...
BACKGROUND: Despite health benefits of sanitation, an estimated 12% of the global population practic...
BACKGROUND: Faced with a massive shortfall in meeting sanitation targets, some governments have impl...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring of sanitation programs is often limited to sanitation access and coverage, ...
BACKGROUND: An estimated 2.4 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation and 946 million...
BACKGROUND: Our group conducted a cluster-randomised trial in 100 villages of Orissa, India to measu...
BACKGROUND: In rural Bangladesh, India and elsewhere, pour-flush pit latrines are the most common sa...
To prevent diseases associated with inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene, people needing latrines ...
This is a report on a study of 53 Bangladesh unions declared “100% sanitized” more than 4.5 years ea...