MONITORING HYGIENE AND SANITATION IN UGANDA 26th May 2015

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Presentation transcript:

MONITORING HYGIENE AND SANITATION IN UGANDA 26th May 2015 Martha Naigaga Environmental Health Officer May 2015

Performance measurement framework Performance in the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) sector is measured annually, with mid term review. 11 Golden indicators 2 of which are for sanitation and hygiene: Sanitation : % of people with access to sanitation (urban / rural), Pupil: toilet stance ratio Hygiene: % of people with access to hand washing facilities Annual Sector performance report is produced and reviewed at the Annual Joint sector Review

Performance measurement framework Participation at the Joint Sector Review Annual Forum where sector performance is reviewed, sector challenges and best practices shared and key priority actions agreed upon in form of undertakings.

Benchmarking district performance Shift from tracking toilet construction inputs (financial investment), process annual growth of sanitation over time Cost Efficiency intermediate outcomes access to hand washing facilities, access to household toilets and Access to school sanitation Outcomes (Open Defecation Free Communities/villages)

Data collection process Raw data collected by Village Health Teams in community Submitted to Health Assistant/ inspector at sub county level Submitted to District Health Inspector for compilation Submitted to the Ministry of Health for Analysis

More holistic reporting on sanitation (inputs, process and outcomes) ACHIEVEMENTS More holistic reporting on sanitation (inputs, process and outcomes) Enabled us to track progress towards ODF and universal access, with more attention towards poor performing regions Triggered corrective action towards poor performing indicators for example triggered communities not achieving ODF, hence more emphasis on follow up Useful tool for advocacy and lobbying for increased prioritization especially at national and district level

OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES Performance measurement framework Institutional set up from the Community to the Ministry which enables information flow Challenges Indicators don’t address Equity and inclusion, gender inequality and supply of improved sanitation The data collection system and submission is still largely manual A recent audit recommended improvement of data collection at community level, more efficient transmission of data from community to districts, improved district level analysis and feedback from district to community, and increased utilization of the generated information.

RECOMMENDATIONS Country Monitoring systems should be able to: Track behavioral outcomes including hygiene behaviors, not only numbers of latrines and money spent Should and can address both ODF (behaviors) and universal access (equity) Inform action. Unless monitoring data is analyzed and used to identify and take corrective actions needed at different levels (national and district), it loses its power and purpose.