Sustainable sanitation:
CLTS triggering process in the Volta Region of Ghana
Sustainable sanitation:
CLTS triggering in Malda District, West Bengal, India (SLTS - school-led total sanitation)
Sustainable sanitation:
CLTS triggering in Malda District, West Bengal, India
Sustainable sanitation:
CLTS triggering in Malda District, West Bengal, India
Sustainable sanitation:
CLTS triggering in Malda District, West Bengal, India
Sustainable sanitation:
Open defecation in rural Bihar, India
Sustainable sanitation:
Open defecation in rural Bihar, India
Sustainable sanitation:
Open defecation in rural Bihar, India
Sustainable sanitation:
The event is carefully monitored by the Hygiene Village Project staff running the programme. A successful triggering is described as a ‘matchbox in a gas station’ where every person is ignited and prepared to take action
Sustainable sanitation:
Singo Katanga (center) has come to the village to raise awareness of good hygiene in a process known as ‘triggering’. She gets villagers to draw a map of the area, showing the main features like the road and the river.
Sustainable sanitation:
Singo gets people to put a pebble where they went to the toilet that morning. She’s a trained Health Surveillance Assistant and draws people into the exercise until everyone’s taking part.
Sustainable sanitation:
Now Singo and the villagers make the transect walk or ‘walk of shame’ by visiting the places they have identified where open defecation takes place. They sing ‘let us end open defecation’.
Sustainable sanitation:
A villager identifies a place which was recently used as a bathroom / toilet
Sustainable sanitation:
The human turd is collected to illustrate how flies carry disease by showing them landing on the turd and then on the food. It is also used to calculate total defecation per year and how during the rainy season this is washed into the water supply. Villag
Sustainable sanitation:
The next stop on the transect walk is the place where meals are prepared. Flies are attracted to human feces and carry diseases by landing on the food.
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Meanwhile fellow Health Surveillance Assistant Webster Phiri leads the triggering for the children. They are also singing: ‘let’s end open defecation’.
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Webster and Singo bring the group back to the village meeting space in high spirits. They are energizing the village into taking action to stop defecating in the bush by building toilets.
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The triggering continues with a recap of how disease is easily spread through poor hygiene. Children under the age of five are especially vulnerable and can die from diseases such as diarrhea.
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A village committee is formed to improve sanitation and end open defecation. Singho helps plan next steps.
Sustainable sanitation:
Chief Mbewa tells his village: “Why is there open defecation in the grass when there is a toilet nearby? Whoever doesn’t use a toilet after the 15th of next month must give a chicken as a penalty.”