Latrines are the most basic form of improved sanitation and are a common public health intervention. Understanding motivations for building and using latrines can help develop effective, sustainable latrine promotion programs. We conducted a mixed-methods study of latrine use in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. We held 15 focus group discussions and surveyed 278 households in five communities. We used the Integrated Behavioral Model for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene interventions to guide our qualitative analysis. Seventy-one percent of households had a latrine, but coverage varied greatly across communities. Higher household income was not associated with latrine use (odds ratio [OR] = 1.9; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.5, 7.7); similarl...
The Sustainable Development Goals will challenge low- and middle-income settings to look at new appr...
Rural households have latrine preferences and unique sanitation needs. An assessment of how rural ho...
Diarrheal diseases account for 7% of deaths in children under five years of age in Tanzania. Improvi...
Rural Ethiopian families bear the responsibility to invest in their own sanitation, resulting in lar...
Background: In developing countries, open defecation is still a major health issue. While there has ...
BackgroundLatrine utilization is the actual behavior in a practice of regularly using existing latri...
OBJECTIVES: To verify reported construction of 22 385 household latrines in 2004, after community mo...
Sustainable latrine use is the headline of sanitation discussions. Despite the efforts, progress lag...
Abstract Background Ethiopia has been experiencing a high prevalence of communicable diseases, which...
Abstract Objective The study was conducted on 313 model and 313 non model households to assess latri...
Nearly half the world's population lacks basic sanitation to protect their environment from human fe...
Abstract Background Despite evidence showing that access to and use of improved sanitation is associ...
Open defecation is still a major health problem in developing countries. While enormous empirical re...
In response to pressure to reach the Millennium Development Goal of improved sanitation access, the ...
<div><p><i>Taenia solium</i> cysticercosis is a neglected parasitic zoonosis occurring in many devel...
The Sustainable Development Goals will challenge low- and middle-income settings to look at new appr...
Rural households have latrine preferences and unique sanitation needs. An assessment of how rural ho...
Diarrheal diseases account for 7% of deaths in children under five years of age in Tanzania. Improvi...
Rural Ethiopian families bear the responsibility to invest in their own sanitation, resulting in lar...
Background: In developing countries, open defecation is still a major health issue. While there has ...
BackgroundLatrine utilization is the actual behavior in a practice of regularly using existing latri...
OBJECTIVES: To verify reported construction of 22 385 household latrines in 2004, after community mo...
Sustainable latrine use is the headline of sanitation discussions. Despite the efforts, progress lag...
Abstract Background Ethiopia has been experiencing a high prevalence of communicable diseases, which...
Abstract Objective The study was conducted on 313 model and 313 non model households to assess latri...
Nearly half the world's population lacks basic sanitation to protect their environment from human fe...
Abstract Background Despite evidence showing that access to and use of improved sanitation is associ...
Open defecation is still a major health problem in developing countries. While enormous empirical re...
In response to pressure to reach the Millennium Development Goal of improved sanitation access, the ...
<div><p><i>Taenia solium</i> cysticercosis is a neglected parasitic zoonosis occurring in many devel...
The Sustainable Development Goals will challenge low- and middle-income settings to look at new appr...
Rural households have latrine preferences and unique sanitation needs. An assessment of how rural ho...
Diarrheal diseases account for 7% of deaths in children under five years of age in Tanzania. Improvi...