Diarrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluating the Impact of Community Led Total Sanitation in Mali. A Randomized Controlled Trial
Behavioral change is a key ingredient for successful adoption of better sanitation practices
in rural Africa. Sanitation programs have, for some time now, incorporated the need to raise
awareness and emphasize the benefits of toilet usage. These endeavors, often combined with
subsidies linked to toilet construction by households, seek to create a demand for
sanitation goods. Yet, progress in securing the desired outcomes from sanitation programs
has been slow. Moreover, benefits of sanitation largely take the form of externalities,
which individuals do not take into account when making their own decisions about
investments. This makes sanitation promotion at the household level particularly
challenging.
A new approach to sanitation entails a shift away from the provision of subsidies for
toilets to individual households and a promotion of behavioral change at individual-level
towards emphasizing collective decision-making in order to produce 'open defecation-free'
villages. The objective of the intervention is to reduce the incidence of diseases related
to poor sanitation and manage public risks posed by the failure to safely confine the
excreta of some community members. The way to achieve this objective is by empowering
communities motivated to take collective action. Local governments and other agencies
perform a facilitating role. There is a growing recognition that this approach, referred to
as Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS), may help with the reduction of open defecation
practices. However, no rigorous impact evaluation of CLTS has been conducted so far. This
randomized controlled trial will study the effect of CLTS in rural Mali. As a result, sound
evidence will become available to see to what extent CLTS improves health outcomes and what
is driving collective action in order to increase sanitation coverage.
The direct recipients of the intervention are members of rural communities in Mali who
aspire to live in a cleaner environment. The donor community, international organizations,
and governments in developing countries will benefit from having simple and clear evidence
on the effectiveness of an innovative program for improving sanitation in rural areas. They
will learn whether the program has worked or failed to achieve its objective of eradicating
open defecation, and about key factors explaining success and failure.
The evaluation study described involves 121 communities in the Region of Koulikoro in rural
Mali. The intervention works in the following manner: communities are facilitated (by means
of government and NGOs staff) to conduct their own appraisal and analysis of open defecation
(OD) and take their own action to become open defecation free (ODF).
In Mali, the Open Defecation Free (ODF) status has been defined as follows: "each family has
a latrine equipped with a cover that limits the proliferation of flies from the pits; all
members of the family exclusively use such latrine to defecate; each latrine is equipped
with a hand washing device (water + soap / water + ash bucket)".
To estimate the causal effect of CLTS the researchers need to construct a valid
counterfactual in order to calculate what would have happened in the absence of the
intervention. Random allocation ensures that on average, treated and untreated communities
share the same observables and unobservables. Random assignment to treatment also overcomes
the main selection problem found in evaluations, where those who are selected to receive the
program may have different attributes than those who were not selected in the first place.
These differences can be caused by observable attributes, more wealthy communities, more
engaged leaders, better weather, etc, may be more willing to engage in CLTS programs, or by
unobservable dimensions too. What is more important is that such differences can be
affecting the outcomes the investigators want to measure. Random assignment to the program
eliminates selection bias because it ensures that on average, communities receiving the
program are similar to the ones that do not receive it.
Although random assignment is at the community level, the basic units of analysis of this
evaluation are households. The investigators are interested in health outcomes for children
under five, because diarrhea is among the main causes of child mortality. Also, the
researchers are interested at looking at morbidity and school attendance for school age
children. Finally, improved sanitation is supposed to produce a redistribution in the use of
time at the household level. In addition the researchers are very interested at looking at
variables that are directly related to the success/failure of the intervention. In
particular, the investigators will monitor latrine use, water quality, general hygiene. The
team will be able to determine whether lack of impact on health outcomes is due to lack of
latrine use despite their availability, or whether it is due to lack of hand hygiene despite
use of latrines.
UNICEF has observed in areas where the program has already been implemented that migration
is relatively low, so the researchers do not expect much attrition. This decrease in
diarrhea can be expected even if the village does not become fully ODF, but take up levels
are lower.
The evaluation comprises gathering data at two points in time: a) baseline, before program
implementation, b) follow up 12 months after program implementation in order to assess
longer-term effects and sustainability. The investigators would be able to gather panel data
at the community and at the household level.
While random assignment allows to compare average outcomes across communities, the
investigators would also perform multivariate regression analysis in order to improve the
precision of our estimates and control for any potential pre-treatment differences. Panel
data allows the use of a difference in difference design, if necessary, and also to include
initial (before the intervention) characteristics of households and communities. Standard
errors will be clustered at the community level.
The communities included in the study understand and agree to be part of the study, meaning
that they accept to work on sanitation issues with CLTS either right away or two years
later. Randomization will be completed after baseline is conducted. UNICEF and the
Directorate of Sanitation of Koulikoro (DNACPN) will conduct the triggering process in the
60 communities assigned to the treatment group.
One of the main concerns of random assignment is the potential contamination of the control
group. This happens for example when there are interactions between members of CLTS
communities and members of control communities. This is a problem in the presence of shared
activities. The problem is that these interactions may cause changes in the control group.
At the extreme, control communities and CLTS communities experience the same change, then
the researchers will not be able to detect any effect. The researchers will ensure the study
communities have geographic buffers, so that interaction is not expected to be very high. In
order to check for interaction between family members living in different communities, the
team added several questions in the surveys and document the extent of interactions. Another
concern that often arises with randomized experiments is that control units may be receiving
similar benefits from other interventions. The investigators will monitor control villages
to ensure this does not happen and document this aspect of the design.
UNICEF plan to conduct strict monitoring during the intervention period (first 3 months).
The research team plans to supplement this work by measuring relevant indicators of
intervention compliance during the intervention period and after the end of the
intervention.
The investigators will give careful attention to the variation in impacts across different
groups, so treatment may be interacted with gender and age indicators, pre-existing
characteristics of communities in terms of collective decision-making, among others in order
to identify how these factors may explain why some people or some communities gain more than
others from the program. Looking at heterogeneity in program impacts also helps in shedding
light on the mechanism behind program's success (or failure).
This is one of the first evaluations using impact evaluation techniques with quantitative
data [and random assignment] of CLTS programs in the developing world. It will also
complement already existing evidence. Another advantage of this evaluation is that it will
look carefully at behavioral outcomes that are behind the adoption of better sanitation
practices and that are often overlooked in evaluations related to sanitation, which tend to
focus more on health outcomes. It is widely accepted that better sanitation improves health,
yet there is still much debate over what a cost-effective way to deliver a sanitation
intervention may be. Success in delivery will very much depend on whether the program is
able to identify bottlenecks that impede adoption of better sanitation practices and whether
it is able to solve the issues that are identified.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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