CENTRE FOR SANITATION AND HEALTH PROMOTION (CENSAHEP) UGANDA

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Kampala, Central, Uganda
Mobile:+256(0) 772 662 062 Email:lukaaya@yahoo.com OR censahepuganda@gmail.com

Friday, April 5, 2013

Poor Sanitation In Africa Causing Hundreds Of Thousands Of Deaths, WaterAid Report Says


Thursday, February 28, 2013

"Poor sanitation is causing hundreds of thousands of deaths a year in Africa, where 600 million people -- about 70 percent of the population -- do not have a safe toilet," and that number is up from 210 million in 1990 and continues to increase as the population grows and people move into poor urban areas, according to a report (.pdf) from WaterAid, titled "Keeping promises: why African leaders need now to deliver on their past water and sanitation commitments," the Guardian reports.
"John Garrett, senior policy analyst at WaterAid, said one of the problems was that governments were prioritizing other areas of need, such as health and education," the newspaper writes, adding, "However, when people do not have access to adequate sanitation and clean water, money spent on health and education is often wasted because people fall ill from preventable diseases such as diarrhea." The newspaper continues, "Donor funding for sanitation amounts to about $9 billion annually, but WaterAid is urging donor countries to double those sums" in order to "help African countries' economies to progress, and save money in health and education, the [non-governmental organization (NGO)] argues" (Harvey, 2/27).

Integration of Water is Key to Achieving Africa's Health Goals

AMREF urges building of partnerships and synthesis of interventions for effective and sustainable outcomes

As the world marks World Water Day, AMREF continues to advocate for integration of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) in all development programmes, especially health-related interventions. This day was established by the United Nations in 1992 to focus attention on the importance of freshwater and to advocate for the sustainable management of freshwater resources. The theme this year is dedicated to cooperation around water.

From our work in communities, AMREF has learnt that extending access to safe water and basic sanitation, and improving hygiene practices, lowers the incidence of diseases related to water and improves public health, especially for women and children. Lack of clean water and poor water resource management in Africa has had a negative domino effect, resulting in widespread, multifaceted illnesses, costing millions of lives and entrenching a cycle of poverty. This is further complicated by the vagaries of climate change and the global economic crunch. The centrality of water resources to everything – from agriculture, food security and nutrition; to sanitation, hygiene and overall health; to industry, human settlement and development in general – means that WASH has to be at the core of all health intervention efforts.
AMREF advocates for power-balanced partnerships to ensure sustainable results. The AMREF-Dutch Alliance, for example, a partnership that includes several other actors in water and sanitation, has successfully facilitated joint learning and acquisition of grant funding and equity finance for programmes in Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda. The partnership has improved the ability of Alliance members to network, share knowledge and draw from each others’ strengths using a multi-stakeholder approach. Without doubt, working in such quality partnerships is proving to be an effective tool for managing water and sanitation programmes.
Reaching the nearly 312 million people in Africa who do not have access to improved sources of drinking water and another estimated 533 million people with no access to improved sanitation facilities will require concerted effort and cooperation among stakeholders in the WASH sector. For the message that access to water and sanitation is a fundamental human right and essential to life, health and dignity to be widely appreciated, more Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) should be encouraged. Shared intervention efforts with consumers, NGOs, environmental health groups, independent service providers, regulators, donors and governments should be encouraged in all WASH interventions. The Katine Community Partnership model in Soroti District of Uganda exemplifies this principle. Several partners includingBarclays Bank, the Guardian/Observer Newspaper (UK) and AMREF worked together with community members and local government authorities to strengthen community structures and ensure sustainability of interventions, which included WASH activities.

For PPPs to thrive, it is important that there be shared incentives in managing water and sanitation interventions. Delegated management systems should not only deliver the best value for money but should add value over and above that delivered by previous water and sanitation service providers. Importantly, too, PPPs must offer both financial and non-financial incentives for contracting parties and stakeholders, based on transparent and mutually negotiated expectations.

Accountability for service delivery has various complementary layers in delegated water service management. Governments, particularly local authorities, should go beyond policy accountability to actual allocation of sufficient resources for water and sanitation programmes. And to ensure  transparency, which is a prerequisite for accountability, AMREF recommends provision of clear and comprehensible information to – and openness to interrogation by –  project beneficiaries.
AMREF advocates for shared management of WASH services and facilities to ensure their sustainability. In this regard, it is important that development actors realise the limits of community-managed WASH services. Communities are already burdened with many other development interventions; leaving sustainability of services such as maintenance of water pumps to them is untenable. Instead, development actors should budget for post-implementation activities to ensure sustainable and effective performance of WASH facilities.
Even as we seek ways to improve and develop WASH systems and services, it is important
to establish measures to significantly reduce water pollution, increase water quality, significantly improve treatment of waste water treatment and water efficiency by ensuring water is delivered to people as close as possible. AMREF’s has made inclusion of household water treatment and human waste treatment a key component of all WASH interventions. In order to achieve this, we stress the need for increased local investment in WASH while also leveraging on international assistance and cooperation.
In recognition of the fact that access to water and sanitation is closely linked to key development and poverty alleviation approaches, AMREF recommends that all African Governments reaffirm their commitment to uphold the human right to safe drinking water and sanitation. AMREF further advocates commitment by African governments to the 2005-2015 International Decade for Action ‘Water for Life’, whose challenge is to focus attention on action-oriented activities and policies that ensure the long-term sustainable management of water resources, including measures to improve sanitation. Achieving the goals of the ‘Water for Life’ Decade requires sustained commitment, cooperation and investment by all stakeholders from 2005 to 2015 and far beyond. This includes a commitment to marking World Water Day.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Read the proposed Marriage and Divorce Bill 2009

Read the proposed Marriage and Divorce Bill 2009 UGANDA 2013

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Poor sanitation costs Uganda shs 389 billion annually


According to the new report released by the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Program on April 17, Uganda loses 389 billion Ugandan shillings each year due to poor sanitation. 
Findings in the Economic Impacts of Poor Sanitation in Africa report - Uganda, show that the 84 percent of the costs come from the annual premature death and about 90 percent of the deaths are as a result of poor water, sanitation, and hygiene.
“We’ve known for some time about the impact of poor sanitation on health, but this is one of the first studies to quantify the annual costs incurred because of poor sanitation,” said Yolande Coombes, the Senior Water and Sanitation Specialist with WSP. “Uganda will not be able to grow sustainably without addressing these costs.”
"Water and sanitation go hand-in-hand with human dignity.  Our study finds that the heaviest burden of poor sanitation falls on poor people," says Jamal Saghir, World Bank Director for Sustainable Development in the Africa Region.  "These findings make an irresistible case for greater investment in sanitation while removing the barriers to better sanitation services. Now is the time to tackle this urgent development priority once and for all.”
According to the findings in the report, open defecation costs Uganda USD$41 million yet eliminating the practice would require less than 650,000 latrines to be built and used.

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Forming associations for hand pump mechanics in Uganda has enhanced the services they provide and ultimately improved functionality, a new study [1] shows.   One such association in Kabong district succeeded in improving functionality of water sources from 20% in 2006 to 96% in 2010.
A 2011 study on the effectiveness of community-managed rural water systems revealed that just 53% were fully functional. With a coverage rate of 65% this implies that  only  about a third of the rural population of Uganda has reliable access to safe drinking water.
Hand Pump Mechanics Associations (HPMAs) have been in existence in Uganda for several years but were under-performing, partly because they were not formalised. In 2007, SNV  Netherlands Development Organisation developed guidelines to improve HPMA performance.
Now the government, through the Ministry of Water and Environment (MWE), and its development partners have decided to set up HPMAs in all districts in Uganda. They have set a target to set up hand pump mechanics /scheme attendants associations in 80% of the districts in FY 2011/12, and operationalise them in at least 30% of districts by FY 2012/13 [2].
Members of the Lira District Hand Pump Mechanics Association undergo refresher training, January 2012. Photo: IRC/Triple-S
While the Ministry and its partners are now rolling out awareness raising and capacity building programmes for  HPMAs, several concerns have been raised. One is about their legal status. The Functionality Working Group, which was set up by the MWE,  recommends that HPMAs first register as Community Based Organisations (CBOs) as required by the Ministry but that they would also need to allowed to undertake commercial activities to ensure their sustainability.
IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre/Sustainable Services as Scale (Triple‐S) is supporting the secretariat of Functionality Working Group.
[1] IRC and SNV, 2012. Hand Pump Mechanics Associations : improving rural water service delivery. (Triple-S briefing note). The Hague, The Netherlands: IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre/Sustainable Services as Scale (Triple‐S). Available at: <http://bit.ly/KTkKzH>
[2] MWE, 2011. Water and environment sector : the third Joint Government of Uganda –Development Partners Sector Review 2011 : agreed minutes : 11th – 13th October 2011, Kampala. Kampala, Uganda: Ministry of Water and Environment. Available at: <http://bit.ly/KTldlw>
Related news: Uganda: associations of pump mechanics help improve functioning of handpumps, E-Source, 14 Dec 2010
Related web sites:
Source: Hand Pump Mechanics Associations: actualising the dream, IRC-Triple-S/Water Services that Last/, May 2012

Urban Water and Sanitation: Who cares about Poor?


The city development planning and judicious resource allocation in most of the cities in South Asian countries is a big challenge.  Among the basic amenities, water and sanitation remained the core concern that lead to health problems, livelihood losses and an impediment to economic growth.  Given the population growth and rapid migration from rural to urban areas, the cities are swelling at an unprecedented rate, while resources are limited in terms of land, water, forest and basic amenities.
The cities in South Asia have grown rapidly in terms of their population sizes, but not proportionately in terms of quality of urban services and facilities. When we take example of India; in term of services, no Indian city provides water 24/7, only half the population has access to safe drinking water, and less than a third has access to sanitation.
The land prices have gone up; the poor are confronted with affordability of shelter, which ultimately forces them to live in unauthorized localities, which we generally call ‘slums’ or ‘unauthorized’ colonies. They in one way are synonymous to ‘No-man’s Land’, and survive on the mercy of  local authorities (e.g. municipality) to recognize them (in their city planning process) or throw them out overnight, for a new project or township. These colonies are extremely unhygienic, filth ridden and are ones nightmare to live. There, you will not find basic services and civic amenities, and in case someone gets that, is a different story altogether.
Let me further quote example from India, where it is estimated that over the next 40 years India will experience one of the most dramatic settlement transitions in history, as its urban population grows from about 300 million to more than 700 million. The public services fall short, largely because, they have little or no accountability to the ultimate client, and outdated management systems are unable to provide the information needed for decision-making.  Similarly, the municipal solid waste and sewage generation in Indian cities have significantly increased over the years from 6 million tons in 1947 to over 69 million tons in 2006, which is becoming a major environmental threat and hazard to the poor.
The integrated city developmental plans related to shelter, basic services, civic amenities like water, sanitation, education, health facilities are failing due to uncoordinated approaches and poor planning processes.   The City Development Planning processes are not guided by a comprehensive approach of planning and ensuring active participation of people. They are being developed in bits and pieces, where poor are further marginalized.
Given present situation, there is urgent need to devise appropriate city development planning processes by the governments in South Asia, those consider adequate provisions for basic services like water and sanitation among others. Without considering the inclusive planning process, there are chances that the ongoing efforts in city planning will not be sustainable. This may further pose serious climatic vulnerability among poor population living in the slums of urban areas in terms of increasing intensity of droughts, shortage of drinking water and increased in food and other commodity prices and related health hazards.

Need Behavior Change Towards Sanitation

Posted by Heeals on January 26, 2013 at 9:08

Sanitation is broad term refer to disposal and management of solid waste, waste water human and cattle excreta etc. In such a way that is does not affect adversely domestic personal hygiene. Sanitation is very important for human health. It contribute to clean and improved environment, social development and generate significant economic benefits.

for complete article please visit :- http://heeals.blogspot.in/