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Where there is water, there is life

Adoption of Household Chlorination in Emergency and Development Contexts in Rural Haiti Michael Ritter. Where there is water, there is life. Our Approach.

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Where there is water, there is life

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  1. Adoption of Household Chlorination in Emergency and Development Contexts in Rural Haiti Michael Ritter Where there is water, there is life

  2. Our Approach • Deep Springs International is a non-profit organization that incubates social enterprises in Haiti under the brand GadyenDlo (“Water Guardian”) • GadyenDlo system is a Safe Water System which consists of a 5-gallon bucket with spigot and lid along with a bottle of locally produced 0.7% sodium hypochlorite solution • Users add 1 capful to 5 gallons of water and keep refillable bottle in the home; community health workers or technicians sell refills and conduct chlorine residual tests • Deep Springs supports the GadyenDlo social enterprise by strategic planning, technical expertise, networking with partners, and subsidies to fill the gap between sales revenue

  3. Emergencies in Haiti • GadyenDlo pilot project started in 2002; Deep Springs began managing in 2008 • Jan. 12, 2010: 7.0 earthquake • >222,000 fatalities; 3 million affected • Leogane: >80% buildings destroyed • October 2010: first cholera case confirmed • Since the first case (first 24 months): • 600,885 cases and 7,568 deaths • “One of the largest epidemics of the disease in modern history to affect a single country”–Pan-American Health Organization

  4. Leogane Quake Response • Pre-quake program • 40 health workers selling GadyenDlo • 1,500 households with systems • Quake response • 165 community health workers (CHWs) trained (125 new CHWs) in Jan. 2010 • Free distributions (Jan. – July 2010): • 15,200 containers distributed • 1.7 million chlorine tablets distributed • Current program reaches 19,740 households (over half of population of Leogane)

  5. Cholera Response • After earthquake, increased chlorine production capacity in response to quake and in preparation for future disasters • Cholera outbreak resulted in dramatic increase in demand for chlorine among households, government, NGOs • Continued to sell refills directly to households through existing channels (local health agents and distributors) • Developed new distribution channels: bulk sales to NGOs and government

  6. Post-Cholera Distribution Channels Partners include:

  7. Observations of Bulk Distributions • Bulk distributions reached large scale: DINEPA / UNICEF project aimed to distribute 500,000 bottles of GadyenDlo chlorine for free in high-risk zones as part of Phase 3 of national cholera response strategy • Initial adoption was much weaker than in household programs: CDC analysis (364 households) who were targeted in northwest dept. (distributions conducted by local political leaders) • 50.3% received a bottle • Of those who received: • 82.7% reported treating; 51.8% had positive chlorine residual • Sustained adoption even weaker than initial adoption: Deep Springs has production capacity to continue to serve these HHs, but currently provides promotion, M&E and distribution point to <5% of HHs in bulk distributions

  8. Bottles of chlorine sold in Jolivert

  9. Leogane Household Program

  10. Observations from Leogane Program • Tapping existing local networks allows quick scale-up AND high adoption • Free distribution in response to quake achieved 10-fold expansion and increased correct use from 47% to >80% • Increased adoption of HWT products in general has been sustained, but brand-specific use (% using GadyenDlo) similar to pre-quake levels • Despite larger total sales relative to pre-quake due to expansion to new households, income generation for health agents and program cost recovery remain challenges • Will / when will free chlorine no longer be available? • Will those currently using free products convert to buying GadyenDlo or stop treating water?

  11. Qualitative Findings • Qualitative data collected in July – August 2012 • 12 focus group discussions (users); 30 in-depth interviews (distributors) • GadyenDlo distributors have difficulty selling in presence of free chlorine • Free products more of an issue in densely populated areas • Areas like Leogane more wary of outside aid than other areas • Distributors who are compensated based on HH visits still conduct visits and education with those who use other products; motivated by improving health of community and do less brand promotion

  12. Conclusions for Other Contexts • Local chlorine production and distribution can be rapidly scaled up if technical knowledge exists prior to emergency • Working with existing, trusted local networks leads to greater correct use in short-term as well as greater sustained use • Rapid scale-ups in emergencies may require more top-down management, but local management early in response leads to more sustainable results • Establishing and strengthening these networks could serve multiple goals of disaster preparedness as well as long-term sustainable programs

  13. Key Issues • Matching distributors (and their motivations) with goals for each phase • May not be one network which is most effective for all phases; may require changing individuals in these roles • Health agents were more effective than political leaders in delivering and promoting adoption in emergency • Entrepreneurs more effective than health agents in GadyenDlo sales • Trainings on selling product vs. health education • Importance of incentives (positive and negative) for sales • Impact of free distributions on long-term use and program financing • Importance of having a national policy on free distributions and executing / enforcing the strategy

  14. DeepSpringsInternational.org

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