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Community Led Total Sanitation in Sub- Saharan Africa – An Update Jane Bevan, UNICEF WCARO, July 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "Community Led Total Sanitation in Sub- Saharan Africa – An Update Jane Bevan, UNICEF WCARO, July 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Community Led Total Sanitation in Sub- Saharan Africa – An Update Jane Bevan, UNICEF WCARO, July 2011

2 Sanitation Coverage in Sub- Saharan Africa 3 out of 4 people do not have access to improved sanitation Estimated population open defecating: 224 M ODF growth is exceptional: Now 4.1M

3 CLTS Progress in the WCA Region CLTS in national policies: A CLTS is explicitly included in official policy / strategy documents B CLTS is implemented in governmental programmes but not included in official policy / strategy C national policy / strategy is being elaborated / validated

4 ODF communitiesPopulation reached Burundi2374,856 Eritrea39133,590 Ethiopia1,913648,260 Kenya207,650 Madagascar13471,412 Malawi41522,026 Mozambique185605,715 Zambia900210,000 TOTAL3,6291,773,509 CLTS Progress in the ESA Region

5 CLTS Progress in the West and Central Africa Region

6 Improved sanitation facilities Unimproved sanitation facilities Open defecation The poorest in sub-Saharan Africa are more than fifteen times as likely as the richest to practice open defecation

7 Key Elements of ODF Success High quality facilitation and good frequency of follow-up visits – at least 2x per week Coordinated national & regional partnerships are key for working at scale Invest in quality of facilitation and Natural Leaders Celebration, competition, awards

8 Next steps for Scaling up CLTS Policy development and advocacy support Pro-poor sanitation marketing studies – models and research Improved CLTS training and monitoring Evidence building e.g. Mali health impact study Continued regional coordination for sharing best practice in CLTS Urban CLTS, schools, institutions………

9 What do we still need to do better? Proceedings of CATS +2 suggested… Monitoring & Evaluating Behaviour Change – Strengthening the ODF verification process – Measuring progress in enabling environment, behaviour change for both sanitation and hygiene Sanitation Marketing – Understanding the approach – Developing the skillset – Forging partnerships to work at scale Cross-cutting issues – equity, partnership, communities of practice

10 “No open defecation in the bush!” Children in Kailahun outside their SLTS latrine © UNICEF/MUWODA 2010 Thank you!


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