Diarrhea Clinical Trial
— CLTSOfficial title:
Evaluating the Impact of Community Led Total Sanitation in Mali. A Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | February 2015 |
Source | Universidad Nacional de La Plata |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Mali: comités d'éthique |
Study type | Interventional |
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.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 39246 |
Est. completion date | December 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Villages located in rural Mali. - CLTS targets small villages (less than 4500 inhabitants). - Open defecation is present Exclution criteria: -Villages where CLTS is already in place |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Mali | Rural Communities in Mali | Bamako | Koulikoro |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Universidad Nacional de La Plata | Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Stanford University, UNICEF |
Mali,
Bernheim Douglas and Antonio Rangel. 2007. Behavioural public economics: welfare and policy analysis with non-standard decision-makers. In Behavioural Economics and its applications. Edited by Peter Diamond and Hannu Vartiainen. Princeton University Press.
Bloom, H.S. (1995). Minimum Detectable Effects: A Simple Way to Report the Statistical Power of Experimental Designs. Evaluation Review, 19(5), 547-556.
Cardenas, Juan-Camilo. 2003. Real wealth and experimental cooperation: experiments in the field lab. Journal of Development Economics, 70: 263-289.
Clasen T, Boeston K, Boisson S, Schmidt WP, Fung IC, Sugden S, Jenkins M, Scott B, Cairncross S (2009). Interventions to improve excreta disposal for the prevention of diarrhoeal disease. (Cochrane Review).
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Psychological outcomes: knowledge, risk perceptions, safety, privacy | Measured 24 months after baseline | No | |
Other | Community outcomes: level of cooperation and trust, social cohesion, wealth disparities, leadership | Experimental games can be used to estimate the level of cooperation within communities. A first goal would be to test if and how communication and public exposure of contributions for a public good to the group scrutiny affects the level of cooperation. A public good experiment involves providing endowments to players and asking them to choose how much of their resources to invest in a group project. When making their decision, they know that the experimenter will collect all contributions, double the amount and redistribute it among participants. They are asked to all put their chosen amount in an envelope at the same time and without discussing it. In this situation, no one, except the experimenter, knows how much each of them contributes, but they do know the total contribution. An interesting variation on this game is to let the group members talk before they fill their envelop. Another variation consists in changing the nature of contributions from private to public. | Measured 24 months after baseline | No |
Other | Symptoms of respiratory illness among children under five years old | Measured 24 months after intervention | No | |
Primary | Diarrhea prevalence of children under five years old | Defined as 3 or more loose or watery defecation events in a 24 hour period. Measured using a 2-day and 2-week recall period. | Measured 24 months after the baseline survey (12 months after intervention complete) | No |
Secondary | Length-for-Age Z-scores of children under five years old and children under two years old | Child's length, standardized to Z-scores using the WHO 2006 growth standards, measured 24 months after baseline. | Measured 24 months after baseline | No |
Secondary | Stunting Prevalence of children under five years old and children under two years old | Child's length, standardized to Z-scores using the WHO 2006 growth standards, measured 24 months after baseline. Children with length-for-age Z-scores < - 2 will be classified as stunted. | Measured 24 months after baseline | No |
Secondary | Weight-for-Age Z-scores of children under five years old and children under two years old | Child's weight, standardized to Z-scores using the WHO 2006 growth standards, measured 24 months after baseline. | Measured 24 months after baseline | No |
Secondary | Underweight Prevalence of children under five years old and children under two years old | Child's weight, standardized to Z-scores using the WHO 2006 growth standards, measured 24 months after baseline. Children with weight-for-age Z-scores < - 2 will be classified as underweight. | Measured 24 months after baseline | No |
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