Formative Research Using Settings and Motives to Explore Child Faeces Disposal and Management in Rural Solomon Islands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Site
2.3. Sampling and Recruitment
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Recording and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Respondent Characteristics
3.2. Stage
‘[disposal in the river is…] an easy practice.’Mother, Isabel province
‘It is convenient and easy to throw them in the bush.’Father, Isabel province
“Before we came down to this place, we stayed on the hill, so we practiced dry pit [sanitation]. But when we came down near the sea, we settled beside this water, and we use the water to defecate.”Mother, Isabel province
3.3. Routines
- Defecation: The child defecates. The faeces enter the environment. Sometimes at a location chosen by the caregiver, sometimes chosen by the child, with or without the knowledge of the caregiver.
- Faeces transport: The faeces are moved from the place of defecation.
- Faeces disposal: The faeces are placed somewhere to reduce the probability of human contact, sight or smell.
- Cleaning of child: Anal cleansing of the child who has defecated, sometimes accompanied by cleaning legs and buttocks. Always with water. Sometimes with soap.
- Cleaning of utensils: Implements or cloths used to move faeces are rinsed or washed.
- Storage of soiled utensils: Implements (particularly clothes or cloth) are temporarily stored for later washing, such as storage overnight in a bucket.
- Handwashing: Hands of caregiver and/or child are rinsed or washed. Always with water. Sometimes with soap.
3.4. Infrastructure
“We have no proper place to dispose of the poo and the distance from the house to the shared toilet is far”—Mother, Guadalcanal province.
3.5. Props
3.6. Roles
3.7. Competencies
3.8. Social Environment: Norms Relating to Disposal Practices
“Most people dispose of faeces in the latrine, especially those who have toilets. For those like us who have problems with our toilet we do it in the mangrove, but we hide it from the community elders. If they know that we practice open defecation again, we will be fined for the practice.”Mother, Isabel province.
“If the mother does not clean her child’s poo whenever the child defecates around the house and her aunties come over to the house and see the poo lying around, they will shout at the mother and call her lazy and tell her to clean it up.”Mother, Isabel province
3.9. Social Environment: Gender-Related Norms
“I never heard much about (fathers’ involvement) from my great grandparents. Because … men during those days would not tolerate (helping with CFM) because they believed that those practices … would cause them to be impure to their gods. So, men were not allowed to practice (CFM), only women. So yes, before men did not usually clean children’s poop compared to today where men participate in cleaning children’s poop, disposing of it and doing other roles that were considered for women before.”Father, Isabel province.
“If my wife asked me to clean the child when she was doing nothing, I would be offended and mad, and tell her that it’s not my role, its women’s role. But if the mother busy doing anything, or sick and no one is around then I can help to do that but only for picking-up feces and cleaning up child’s bottom—never laundry.”Father, Guadalcanal province.
3.10. Rational Planning: Knowledge about Child Faeces and Disease Transmission
“… if the river isn’t flowing, germs from the poo will stay in the water and spoil the water this will cause skin itchiness and disease if people touch or swim in the water.”Mother, Isabel province.
“I was told by my mother that infant’s faeces are not harmful, so it is okay to dispose/wash them of in the river”Mother, Guadalcanal province.
3.11. Motives
“Because mothers always think about our child’s wellbeing—always our children come first”Mother, Guadalcanal province.
“I will feel ashamed because I am not doing the same thing as the rest of the community. The community will talk about me, and they will not be happy with me”Mothers Group respondents, Isabel province
“(Some think that) men should not be involved in any role that deals with child’s faeces. Others might talk (gossip) about a man who does get involved, however, as a father, he probably cares for his child and would just do it anyway”.Father, Guadalcanal province.
“A type of man that never cares about the culture/custom first, but rather cares and loves his child for healthy living”Father, Guadalcanal province.
“(The) type of man that are willing to do anything for the wellbeing of the family. They are always willing to help their wife and keep their family healthy”.Father, Isabel province.
“…when poo is lying around the house, it looks disgusting so the best thing to do is to bury and hide it”.Mother, Isabel province.
“If the poo cannot be removed immediately the mother might forget to clean it. This will cause bad smell for the family”Father, Guadalcanal province.
“…if the faeces are disposed of in the water the faeces will wash down the stream but when it’s disposed of in the bush the faeces will stay there and when people go there, they will step on it.”Father, Isabel province.
“If we throw it in the sea sometimes a wave can take it back to the seashore and children or we can step on it again”.Mother, Isabel province.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Village 1 | Village 2 | Village 3 | Village 4 | Village 5 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Village population 1 | 70 | 248 | 409 | 113 | 150 |
Location | Isabel province, inland | Isabel province, coastal | Isabel province, inland | Guadalcanal province, inland | Guadalcanal province, coastal |
CLTS 2 status | NOD 3 (2019) | NOD (2017) | Triggered (2017) | NOD (2016) | NOD (2021) |
Tool | Sample Size | Description |
---|---|---|
Structured-recall demonstration | 61 respondents from 57 households | Caregivers of children under five years were asked to recall the last time the youngest child defecated and to demonstrate the sequence of steps they took in response. We asked respondents (42 mothers and 19 fathers) to demonstrate the sequence of CFM beginning with defecation by the child and ending at the point that the respondent went on to an activity not related to child faeces. Observers recorded the sequence of events (routine) and observable features of the setting (infrastructure, props), and used the demonstration as a prompt to question the caregiver about the behaviours demonstrated and about possible social influences on these. |
Spot check observation | 57 households | Characteristics of household sanitation, hygiene and water infrastructure were recorded using a predefined checklist. |
Semi-structured interviews (SSI) | 121 respondents | Interviews with individual caregiver respondents, following a set of open-ended questions with the order, prompting, probing and additional lines of questioning applied at the discretion of the interviewer. Interviews took place with male and female respondents (35 fathers, 78 mothers, and eight grandmothers) and were used to explore the same topics as described for focus group discussions. |
Key informant interviews | 30 respondents | SSIs with village chiefs (4), leaders and representatives of the WASH or CLTS committee (8), and household members with experience of CLTS (18) |
Small group discussion | 26 groups | Discussions with small, single-gender groups, 14 with mothers, eight with fathers and four with grandmothers, used to explore a variety of topics including: gender roles, knowledge and attitudes relating to child faeces management, social norms relating to child faeces management. |
Motive mapping | 52 respondents in 9 groups, 7 individuals | A projective technique using picture cards illustrating different child faeces disposal practices and motives, allowing respondents to ascribe motives to practices and to discuss the plausibility of associating specific motives with safe or unsafe practices. This was done with respondents in small groups and individually, as separate activities to the initial FGDs, but with similar respondents. |
Doer/Non-doer attributes | 9 respondents | A projective technique whereby respondents attribute individual and household characteristics to hypothetical ‘doers’ (men who participate in child faeces disposal/women who use a latrine for child faeces disposal) and ‘non-doers’ (men who do not participate in child faeces disposal/women who do not use a latrine for child faeces disposal). This was done with respondents in small groups and individually, as separate activities to the initial FGDs, but with similar respondents. |
Village mapping | 5 groups | A participatory tool whereby respondents, in a single-gender group separately to the initial FGDs, work together to draw a map of their village, marking features of potential interest to the project, such as water sources, waste disposal sites and defecation sites. |
BCD Element | Summary Definition |
---|---|
Stage | The immediate location (in and around the home) where demonstrated CFM activities were observed |
Routines | Sequences of behaviour performed regularly |
Roles | The behaviour of individuals contributing to the overall CFM sequence |
Competencies | Physical and cognitive abilities that allow individuals to perform CFM actions |
Infrastructure | Technologies or manmade features of the stage used to complete the CFM actions. |
Props | Objects manipulated and used to complete CFM actions. |
Social Environment: Norms | Implicit social rules |
Rational Planning | A brain system that uses information to compare different possible outcomes, inform choices and influence behaviour in pursuit of longer-term goals |
Motivated Brain | A brain system that directs behaviour towards short to medium-term goals that are driven by one or more of 15 human motives |
Characteristic | ||
---|---|---|
Age (years) | Mean | 29.6 |
Median | 30.0 | |
Range | 20–45 | |
Gender | Female | 42 (69%) |
Male | 19 (31%) | |
Number of children in household | Mean | 2.3 |
Median | 2.0 | |
Range | 1–6 | |
Age of youngest child (months) | Mean | 20.2 |
Median | 23.0 | |
Range | 1–60 | |
Household sanitation infrastructure—type | None | 14 (25%) |
Dry pit latrine | 24 (42%) | |
Pour-flush latrine | 19 (33%) | |
Household sanitation infrastructure—functionality | Latrine is functional, stable, clean, and not dark | 4 (7%) |
Household handwashing infrastructure | Water and soap | 14 (23%) |
Water only | 29 (48%) | |
None | 14 (23%) |
Action | Description | Frequency (n = 61) |
---|---|---|
Defecation (location) | Outside house on ground | 28 (46%) |
Toilet/latrine | 13 (21%) | |
Floor inside house | 10 (16%) | |
Diaper/nappy | 5 (8%) | |
Outside in river, stream or on beach (near waterway) | 3 (5%) | |
In clothes | 1 (2%) | |
In designated open-defecation area | 1 (2%) | |
Faeces transport (utensils/materials used) | Spade | 16 (26%) |
Cardboard, paper, cloth, toilet paper | 7 (11%) | |
Reusable nappy | 7 (11%) | |
Leaves, coconut shell, grass | 6 (10%) | |
Clothes | 3 (5%) | |
Disposable diaper | 2 (3%) | |
Waste plastic packaging | 1 (2%) | |
None (faeces not transported) | 19 (31%) | |
Faeces disposal (location) | Latrine (transported to latrine) | 17 (28%) |
Latrine (defecation in latrine) | 13 (21%) | |
Thrown in sea, beach, river, stream or drain | 8 (13%) | |
Thrown in bush or left at OD site | 7 (11%) | |
Buried | 6 (10%) | |
Washed from cloth/nappy | 4 (7%) | |
Defecated and left in sea, beach, river, stream or drain | 4 (7%) | |
Garbage | 2 (3%) | |
Cleaning child | Child’s bottom washed | 58 (95%) |
Cleaning utensils | Material or utensil washed | 16 (26%) |
Handwashing | Respondent’s hands washed | 20 (33%) |
Child’s hands washed | 18 (30%) |
Transport | Disposal | Cleaning Child | Cleaning Utensils | Hand Washing | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First action taken | 30 (63%) | 11 (2%) | 17 (35%) | 0 | 0 |
Second action taken | 13 (27%) | 30 (63%) | 1 (2%) | 0 | 4 (8%) |
Third action taken | 0 | 12 (25%) | 30 (63%) | 0 | 0 |
Fourth action taken | 0 | 0 | 0 | 16 (33%) | 9 (18%) |
Fifth action taken | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 (2%) |
Action not performed | 5 (10%) | 5 (10%) | 0 | 32 (67%) | 35 (71%) |
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Biran, A.; Sanderson, R.; Gonzalez, D.; Bugoro, H.; Kadir, M.; Gegeo, D.; Keboy, J.; Lifoia, C.; Funubo, S.; Honimae, H.; et al. Formative Research Using Settings and Motives to Explore Child Faeces Disposal and Management in Rural Solomon Islands. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9815. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169815
Biran A, Sanderson R, Gonzalez D, Bugoro H, Kadir M, Gegeo D, Keboy J, Lifoia C, Funubo S, Honimae H, et al. Formative Research Using Settings and Motives to Explore Child Faeces Disposal and Management in Rural Solomon Islands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(16):9815. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169815
Chicago/Turabian StyleBiran, Adam, Rosie Sanderson, Diana Gonzalez, Hugo Bugoro, Mohammad Kadir, David Gegeo, Jamesford Keboy, Clement Lifoia, Sheilla Funubo, Hellenda Honimae, and et al. 2022. "Formative Research Using Settings and Motives to Explore Child Faeces Disposal and Management in Rural Solomon Islands" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 16: 9815. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169815
APA StyleBiran, A., Sanderson, R., Gonzalez, D., Bugoro, H., Kadir, M., Gegeo, D., Keboy, J., Lifoia, C., Funubo, S., Honimae, H., Pitasua, L. N., Tatalu, J., Jonah, P., & Souter, R. (2022). Formative Research Using Settings and Motives to Explore Child Faeces Disposal and Management in Rural Solomon Islands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(16), 9815. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169815