Project Title Ensuring Access to Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for
Transcription
Project Title Ensuring Access to Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for
Niger 2012 Appealing Agency Project Title Project Code Sector/Cluster Refugee project SAVE THE CHILDREN (SC) Ensuring Access to Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Children and Families Affected by the Food Security Crisis in Niger Crisis NIG-12/WS/49615/R WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE Implementing Partners Project Duration No Improve children’s nutritional status and increase resilience of drought/cholera/flood-affected families in Niger, through increased access to safe water and sanitation, and improved hygiene practices in 6 district of Maradi, Zinder and Diffa region Total: 1,000,000 Children and their families affected by food security, cholera or flood crisis Female: 30,000 Children (under 18): 40,000 Ministry of Health, Ministry of Hydraulics, WaterAid, local NGOs Apr 2012 - Apr 2013 Current Funds Requested Location Priority / Category Gender Marker Code $1,500,000.00 Multiple locations MEDIUM 2a - The project is designed to contribute significantly to gender equality Subset Of Appeal Sahel Food Insecurity Crisis Enhanced Geographical Fields Diffa Maradi Zinder Objectives Beneficiaries Needs Important drinking water, sanitation and hygiene gaps were highlighted in the three operational areas of Save the Children in Niger, clearly more linked to structural problems than to the deficit of rains during summer 2011. However, they represent a significant cause of malnutrition, and lack of resilience of population to face current food insecurity. Rural sanitation coverage has significantly increased the past few years, reaching 34% in some of the area assessed. Majority of villages are covered with one or several water points, although their insufficient yield and numbers oblige women and girls to spend between 1 or 2 hours per day to fetch water to cover the needs of their large family. Apart from the urban centers covered with chlorinated pipe water, drinking water is never treated. Hygiene knowledge is often good: usage of soap is for example significant. But, depending on the area, hygiene and sanitation practices such as solid /liquid waste management, or management of babies’ excreta, remain extremely worrying. WASH conditions of the 90 health centers supervised by Save in Niger varies a lot from one region to another one; all of them have been assessed during the evaluation, which will allow corrective measures to be taken in the coming months . About half of them had a water point available, although often an unprotected well, and drinking water treatment is very seldom done, putting at risk both patients and staff to diarrhoeal diseases transmission. About 60% of them had incinerators and latrines, although often in insufficient numbers to cover needs of staff, and male and female patients. Schools very seldom have a water point, but often have water storage /hand washing containers that children or school committee members are expected to fill by turn, which is rarely done, highlighting gaps in terms of management. Very few schools had hygiene and cleaning materials, apart some in Maradi. Between 30 to 80% of the schools have functioning latrines, although often in insufficient numbers, or unused by many children. When latrines were not separated, girls mentioned being prevented from using them by fear that boys would tease her. Boys mentioned not using a latrine because of bad smell, or fear to fall in the pit. Activities Activities linked to Result 1: Page 1 of 2 Activities will consist in providing each health centres with a hygiene, cleaning and water treatment kit, implement small scale sanitation and water supply rehabilitation works, and train health centre management committees Activities linked to Result 2: Activities will consist in the following: o Provide mothers with malnourished child attending to the health centres with a WASH package consisting in hygiene promotion, and hygiene and water treatment kit. o In villages identified for their high malnutrition rate through the health centres: ? improve hygiene promotion training and visual tools of the existing community health volunteers ? Create and support children club, which will be a platform for approaching children for various sectors, such as education, protection and hygiene promotion o According to funding, the following non-priority components can also be deployed in the same villages identified for their high malnutrition rate: ? Increase sanitation coverage through CLTS, ? Improve or rehabilitate water points ? Create/support WASH committees, to ensure the proper management of the infrastructure. Committees (or Water users association in the case of a mechanical pumping system) and their management system will be set up according to Niger national guidelines . Committees will be provided with technical and financial management training, hygiene promotion training, as well as donated a kit of material and tools. Activities linked to Result3 In the areas identified as flood or cholera prone, Save the Children will carry out contingency activities to prepare the local authorities and communities to face possible disasters in summer 2012. Activities will consist in training staff of both ministry of health and hydraulics in emergency response, identifying and training a network of community volunteers in the areas usually affected by cholera and floods, stock piling a contingency stock of hygiene kits and hygiene promotion material for 500 families and materials to mount a 5 bed CTC (Cholera Treatment Center). Outcomes Result 1: The 90 Health and Nutrition centres supervised by Save the Children in the affected area have adequate WASH facilities. Result 2: 100,000 persons (malnourished children and families) adopt better hygiene and sanitation practices at home through supply of hygiene kits, supporting hygiene promotion activities and promotion of low cost latrine construction activities Result 3: 30,000 People have improved their resilience to shocks, and local governmental and non -governmental actors are better prepared to respond to disasters such as drought, cholera outbreak and floods Save the Children Original BUDGET items $ 0 Total Save the Children Current BUDGET items WASH in health center Hygiene and water treatment kits community based WASH Flood and cholera Disaster risk reducation HR and support cost Total $ 350,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 450,000 1,500,000 Page 2 of 2
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