drinking water. Only about 50-60% of villages have access to clean drinking water. In hilly hamlets, unwalled wells located near streams are common sources, but they are prone to contamination during the monsoon as rainwater run-off brings all kinds of dirt, including animal dung and human excreta.
Sanitation coverage (toilet construction) has improved over the last few years as a result of various government and non-government initiatives as well as families’ own initiatives, but in our work area around 20-60% of families across different panchayats still do not have access to a toilet. According to reports, even in villages declared open-defecation free (ODF), about 18% of households still do not have access to toilets.
More than a third of those who own toilets still defecate in the open. Even when a family owns a toilet, not all members, particularly children and the elderly, use it all of the time. Seasonality is a significant factor in understanding habit formation amongst users: only 45% of households use toilets in all seasons of the year.
The government programmes dealing with the different components of WASH - rural drinking water, sanitation, hygiene/health and education - in rural areas are not effectively linked at the level of execution. There have also been few effective efforts to change behaviour with relation to toilet use.
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