1 / 25

New Approaches in Environmental Health

New Approaches in Environmental Health. The Hygiene Improvement Project (HIP). Presented by: Lynne Cogswell/HIP, Eric Mintz/CDC and Brandt Witte/HIP. Overview. Learning about HIP Establishing a Behavioral Context Providing a Technical Overview of POU Treatment Options

wingram
Télécharger la présentation

New Approaches in Environmental Health

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Approaches in Environmental Health The Hygiene Improvement Project (HIP) Presented by: Lynne Cogswell/HIP, Eric Mintz/CDC and Brandt Witte/HIP

  2. Overview • Learning about HIP • Establishing a Behavioral Context • Providing a Technical Overview of POU Treatment Options • Moving Forward Together to Improve Hygiene

  3. The Problem Diarrhea is… • Serious: Over 1.6 million deaths in under 5s each year • Common: Almost 2 billion total cases per year • Costly: Health care and household burden The number of cases has not gone down in 30 years.

  4. The Project HIP is: • a 5-year USAID-funded project (2004-2009) of AED, ARD, IRC, Manoff designed to achieve • at-scale hygiene improvement efforts • in 5 countries and through selected, strategic activities, • which are centered on 3 key hygiene practices 

  5. Feces Disposal can reduce diarrheal diseases by 30% or more.

  6. Hand washing can reduce diarrheal diseases by 40% or more.

  7. Improving Quality of Water at POU can reduce diarrheal diseases by 30%-40%.

  8. Key HIP Tasks • At-scale country implementation • Integration of hygiene into health and non-health platforms • Global leadership and advocacy around hygiene improvement • Support and liaison to PVOs, NGOs, and networks • Knowledge management to share best practices

  9. Hygiene Behavior Context • Behavior First • Developing a Behavior Change Strategy • At-Scale Hygiene Behavior Change Efforts • Characteristics of At-Scale Efforts (HIP Priorities)

  10. Behavior First If you consider “behavior first,” it allows you to: • Identify, promote and facilitate improved behaviors that: • Have significant positive impact on health and • Are feasible to achieve, i.e. people both willing and able to make changes. • Design program interventions that motivate and facilitate these improved behaviors. • Eliminate preconceived program designs.

  11. Developing a Behavior Change Strategy (BCS) Step 1: Determine improved behaviors. Step 2: Determine what needs to happen to support improved behavior and assess what is presently happening. Step 3: Detail additional interventions necessary to encourage and sustain improved behaviors. FEASIBLE &IMPROVED Practiced Ideal

  12. For Example: • Water Supply • Sanitation systems • Available Household Technologies and Materials • For Example: • Communication • Social mobilization • Community participation • Social marketing • Training Access to Hardware Hygiene Promotion Enabling Environment • For Example: • Policy improvement • Institutional strengthening • Financing and cost-recovery • Cross-sectoral coordination • Public/Private Partnerships Hygiene Improvement Diarrheal Disease Prevention BCS Development These all need to be taken into consideration to develop an effective BCS.

  13. At-Scale Hygiene Behavior Efforts Ensuring Access to Technology, Hardware and Products Promoting Hygiene As behavior change potential & likelihood of sustained behavior increases, hygiene improves. Maximum potential for change exists here. Creating an Enabling Environment

  14. CHARACTERISTICS Systems-Approach

  15. All 3 key practices Integration

  16. Multiple levels Multiple interventions

  17. Multiple stakeholders Multiple options

  18. POU Treatment Options • Options Available • Behavioral Implications

  19. Behavioral Implication: CONVENIENCE

  20. Behavioral Implication: ACCEPTABILITY

  21. Behavioral Implication: ACCESS

  22. Behavioral Implication: COST

  23. Next Steps • What are the priority hygiene improvement needs of CORE members? • How can HIP help meet these needs? • What are possible collaborative efforts?

  24. TOGETHER, we want to move the world from this….

  25. to this!

More Related