BACKGROUND: The practice of sharing sanitation facilities does not meet the current World Health Organization/UNICEF definition for what is considered improved sanitation. Recommendations have been made to categorize shared sanitation as improved sanitation if security, user access, and other conditions can be assured, yet limited data exist on user preferences with respect to shared facilities. OBJECTIVE: This study analyzed user perceptions of shared sanitation facilities in rural households in East Java, Indonesia, and Bangladesh. METHODS: Cross-sectional studies of 2,087 households in East Java and 3,000 households in Bangladesh were conducted using questionnaires and observational methods. Relative risks were calculated to analyze asso...
We conducted a cross sectional study to assess 1) the association between access to basic sanitation...
The international debate on the question of whether shared and/or public sanitation facilities shoul...
Community Approaches to Total Sanitation (CATS) programmes, like the Sanitasi Total Berbasis Masyara...
BackgroundThe practice of sharing sanitation facilities does not meet the current World Health Organ...
Background The practice of sharing sanitation facilities does not meet the current World Health Orga...
INTRODUCTION: A growing proportion of the global population rely on shared sanitation facilities, de...
In 2012, the Government of Indonesia and UNICEF launched a project within eastern provinces of Indon...
Part of the Environmental Public Health Commons, and the Occupational Health and Industria
Health risks associated with poor sanitation behaviours continue to be reported mostly from low-inco...
Rural Ethiopian families bear the responsibility to invest in their own sanitation, resulting in lar...
Shared sanitation facilities (SSFs) have contributed considerably to sanitation access in many low-i...
Communal facilities are enabling many slum dwellers access to sanitation services.With the increase ...
In recent years, shared facilities have contributed substantially to increased access to sanitation ...
To prevent diseases associated with inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene, people needing latrines ...
The Sustainable Development Goals have set an ambitious target to end open defecation by 2030 by bui...
We conducted a cross sectional study to assess 1) the association between access to basic sanitation...
The international debate on the question of whether shared and/or public sanitation facilities shoul...
Community Approaches to Total Sanitation (CATS) programmes, like the Sanitasi Total Berbasis Masyara...
BackgroundThe practice of sharing sanitation facilities does not meet the current World Health Organ...
Background The practice of sharing sanitation facilities does not meet the current World Health Orga...
INTRODUCTION: A growing proportion of the global population rely on shared sanitation facilities, de...
In 2012, the Government of Indonesia and UNICEF launched a project within eastern provinces of Indon...
Part of the Environmental Public Health Commons, and the Occupational Health and Industria
Health risks associated with poor sanitation behaviours continue to be reported mostly from low-inco...
Rural Ethiopian families bear the responsibility to invest in their own sanitation, resulting in lar...
Shared sanitation facilities (SSFs) have contributed considerably to sanitation access in many low-i...
Communal facilities are enabling many slum dwellers access to sanitation services.With the increase ...
In recent years, shared facilities have contributed substantially to increased access to sanitation ...
To prevent diseases associated with inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene, people needing latrines ...
The Sustainable Development Goals have set an ambitious target to end open defecation by 2030 by bui...
We conducted a cross sectional study to assess 1) the association between access to basic sanitation...
The international debate on the question of whether shared and/or public sanitation facilities shoul...
Community Approaches to Total Sanitation (CATS) programmes, like the Sanitasi Total Berbasis Masyara...