社区主导的全面卫生规模化:经验、问题和前进道路的思考

Robert Chambers
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引用次数: 138

摘要

可能有多达20亿生活在农村地区的人受到露天排便的不利影响。妇女、少女、儿童和婴儿是缺乏厕所、隐私和卫生的受害者。农村地区的环境卫生和个人卫生在增进人类福祉和促进千年发展目标方面具有重大潜力。通过向个体家庭提供硬件补贴的方法是无效的。社区主导的全面卫生(CLTS)是一种革命性的方法,促进社区对露天排便(OD)进行自己的评估和分析,并采取自己的行动成为无露天排便(ODF)。在CLTS传播的六个国家——孟加拉国、印度、印度尼西亚、巴基斯坦、埃塞俄比亚和肯尼亚——方法在组织上有所不同,非政府组织、项目和政府的组合截然不同。扩大规模战略的实际内容包括:培训和便利;在有利条件下开始;开展宣传活动并鼓励竞争;招募和委托团队以及全职辅导员和培训师;组织研讨会和交叉访问;支持和赞助自然领袖和社区顾问;激励和增强儿童、青年和学校的能力;利用市场并促进获得硬件;核实和证明ODF状态;以及寻找和支持各级冠军。传播好CLTS需要不断学习、适应和创新。它面临挑战。从范式上讲,它需要重大的制度、专业和个人转变。高层的反对、支付巨额预算的压力、迅速扩大规模的要求,以及为农村家庭提供硬件补贴的计划,一直是并仍然是威胁和障碍。需要审查、反思和研究的问题包括:多样性、定义和原则;与互补方法的协同作用;规模、速度和质量;创造性多样性;以及物质、社会和政策的可持续性。在寻求建设性的前进道路时,四个关键主题或重点是:方法发展和行动学习;创造性创新和批判性意识;学习和行动联盟和网络,在社区、地区和国家之间进行快速学习;以及寻求播种自我传播或轻接触运动。良好传播的关键是找到、支持和增加各级冠军,然后是他们的愿景、承诺和勇气。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Going to Scale with Community-Led Total Sanitation: Reflections on Experience, Issues and Ways Forward

Perhaps as many as 2 billion people living in rural areas are adversely affected by open defecation (OD). Those who suffer most from lack of toilets, privacy and hygiene are women, adolescent girls, children and infants. Sanitation and hygiene in rural areas have major potential for enhancing human wellbeing and contributing to the MDGs. Approaches through hardware subsidies to individual households have been ineffective. Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) is a revolutionary approach in which communities are facilitated to conduct their own appraisal and analysis of open defecation (OD) and take their own action to become ODF (open defecation-free).

In six of the countries where CLTS has been spread – Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Ethiopia and Kenya – approaches differ organisationally with contrasting combinations of NGOs, projects and governments.

Practical elements in strategies for going to scale have included: training and facilitating; starting in favourable conditions; conducting campaigns and encouraging competition; recruiting and committing teams and full-time facilitators and trainers; organising workshops and cross-visits; supporting and sponsoring Natural Leaders and community consultants; inspiring and empowering children, youth and schools; making use of the market and promoting access to hardware; verifying and certifying ODF status; and finding and supporting champions at all levels.

To spread CLTS well requires continuous learning, adaptation and innovation. It faces challenges. Paradigmatically, it requires major institutional, professional and personal shifts. Opposition at senior levels, pressures to disburse large budgets, demands to go to scale rapidly, and programmes to subsidise hardware for individual rural households, have been and remain threats and obstacles. Issues for review, reflection and research include: diversity, definition and principles; synergies with complementary approaches; scale, speed and quality; creative diversity; and physical, social and policy sustainability. In seeking constructive ways forward, four key themes or thrusts are: methodological development and action learning; creative innovation and critical awareness; learning and action alliances and networks, with fast learning across communities, districts and countries; and seeking to seed self-spreading or light touch movements. A key to good spread is finding, supporting and multiplying champions, at all levels, and then their vision, commitment and courage.

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