A higher rung on the sanitation ladder

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Presentation transcript:

Safely-Managed Sanitation: Monitoring higher levels of service in SDG Target 6.2

A higher rung on the sanitation ladder SDG 6.2 Safely Managed Sanitation (SMS) Going beyond hygienic separation of excreta from human contact at the household and including safe disposal in situ, safe emptying transport and treatment MDG 7c Basic sanitation Private improved sanitation Limited sanitation Improved sanitation facility Unimproved sanitation Fixed point defecation No services Open defecation Going beyond hygienic separation of excreta from human contact , including transport and treatment

Why “safely managed” and “safely treated” The 2014 WHO burden of disease for diarrhoea estimate shows that moving from no sanitation to improved sanitation yields modest health gains (16% reduction in diarrhoea). But when excreta to properly remove from household, communities and the environment health gains are much higher (additional 63% reduction in diarrhoea) – this is what we call safely managed sanitation and wastewater – and this is why the indicators under the SDGs are more ambitious.

SDG Indicators for Targets 6.2 and 6.3 Goal 6 6.1 Drinking water 6.2 Sanitation and hygiene 6.3 Wastewater / Water quality 6.4 Water use 6.5 Water resources 6.6 Eco-systems 6.2.1 Proportion of population with Safely Managed Sanitation services including a hand washing facility with soap and water 6.3.1 Percentage of Wastewater Safely treated Indicator 6.2.1: % of population using safely managed sanitation services (including a handwashing facility with soap) Definition: Population using a basic sanitation facility, which is: not shared with other households and where excreta is safely disposed in situ or (transported) and treated offsite.

Session Overview A proposed monitoring framework Barbara Evans (Uni Leeds) 15”   Experiences from Uganda and Peru pilot testing Richard Matua (MWE, Uganda) 10” Teofilo Montiero (OPS/ETRAS, Peru)   10” Q&A to presenters 10” What does “safely managed” and “safely treated” mean? 10” Lars Schoebitz (Consultant) Panel discussion: moderated by Jan-Willem Rosenboom (BMGF) 20” Optimists - Barbara Evans, Pete Kolsky (UNC) Implementers - Richard Matua and Teofilo Montiero Pragmatists - Tom Slaymaker, Rick Johnston (WHO/Unicef JMP) Open Q&A to panellists 10”