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1. Building Partnerships for children’s health Presented by Benita Mayosi
Medical Research Council
NIRU
2. Why School Sanitation? Emerged as a response to the high level of intestinal parasites amongst school going children in Khayelitsha, Cape Town.
Three pronged approach
Sanitation audits done at schools
3. Why the guidelines No clear agreement on minimum standards
Principals and SGBs unsure of roles and responsibilities
Government departments passing the buck
Our interest in school sanitation stems from our involvement in a school based deworming programme in Khayelitsha.
Step 1 focused on medical treatment to deworm learners
Step 2 focused on health and hygiene education to prevent reinfection
Step 3 focused on water and sanitation
The bottom line
It is not enough to teach learners where worms come from and how to prevent them spreading.
We need to provide learners with the tools (soap, toilet paper, toilets and washbasins) they need to put what they have learnt into practice.
Our interest in school sanitation stems from our involvement in a school based deworming programme in Khayelitsha.
Step 1 focused on medical treatment to deworm learners
Step 2 focused on health and hygiene education to prevent reinfection
Step 3 focused on water and sanitation
The bottom line
It is not enough to teach learners where worms come from and how to prevent them spreading.
We need to provide learners with the tools (soap, toilet paper, toilets and washbasins) they need to put what they have learnt into practice.
4. What’s the bottom line?
5. School sanitation audit - Khayelitsha 9 of the 12 schools don’t have enough toilets.
This problem is exacerbated when toilets are blocked or broken.
For example: School J actually has enough toilets to meet learners needs (23:1) but when only 5 of the 40 are working this leads to a learner to toilet ratio of 86:1.
9 of the 12 schools don’t have enough toilets.
This problem is exacerbated when toilets are blocked or broken.
For example: School J actually has enough toilets to meet learners needs (23:1) but when only 5 of the 40 are working this leads to a learner to toilet ratio of 86:1.
6. Underlying Causes Structural
Technical
Education
Management Structural – continuous blockages
Technical – flushing devises outdated
Education – strange objects in toilet
Management – dirty toilets
- toilets used as store rooms
- no budget allocated for toilet paper, soap or cleaning staff
- vandalism
Structural – continuous blockages
Technical – flushing devises outdated
Education – strange objects in toilet
Management – dirty toilets
- toilets used as store rooms
- no budget allocated for toilet paper, soap or cleaning staff
- vandalism
7. Working towards solutions School Sanitation Task Team:
Medical Research Council
WCED Physical Resources Planning
Department of Public Works
PAWC School Health
PAWC Health Promotion
PAWC Environmental Health
City of Cape Town Environmental Health
School Sanitation Task Team established to provide co-ordinated response consisting of:School Sanitation Task Team established to provide co-ordinated response consisting of:
8. The School Sanitation Guidelines Put school sanitation on the agenda
Set basic standards
Clarify roles and responsibilities
Address a range of school sanitation problems
Hold responsible stakeholders accountable
9. 1. Setting standards Schools should have sufficient toilets and washbasins for learners needs
The toilets and washbasins must always be in a working order
The toilets must always be clean and hygienic
Learners need clean water and soap to wash hands after using the toilet
Female/Girls’ toilets need sanitary bins
Ensure personal safety and privacy of learners
Accommodation for learners with special needs
Schools should have sufficient toilets and washbasins for learners needs
The toilets and washbasins must always be in a working order
The toilets must always be clean and hygienic
Learners need clean water and soap to wash hands after using the toilet
Female/Girls’ toilets need sanitary bins
Ensure personal safety and privacy of learners
Accommodation for learners with special needsSchools should have sufficient toilets and washbasins for learners needs
The toilets and washbasins must always be in a working order
The toilets must always be clean and hygienic
Learners need clean water and soap to wash hands after using the toilet
Female/Girls’ toilets need sanitary bins
Ensure personal safety and privacy of learners
Accommodation for learners with special needs
10. 2. Roles and responsibilities
11. 3. Day to day maintenance Behavioural change
Regular cleaning of toilets
Regular inspection of taps and flushing devises
Repairing damaged washers, taps, cisterns and flushing mechanisms
Make use of learners- monitors, prefects or sanitation committee
Ensure access to clean water, toilet paper, soap and serviced sanitary bins
12. 4. Troubleshooting
Urgent repairs
Emergency repairs
Scheduled maintenance
13. The way forward Communication
Monitoring and Evaluation
Advocacy
Ratios
Grade R
Communication – WCED circular to inform EMDC and schools
Monitoring and Evaluation – City of Cape Town EHPs visit schools 2x year
Advocacy – raise public awareness of school sanitation
- influence decision makers to prioritise and budget for sanitation
Ratios – clarify acceptable minimum standards
- currently no budget allocation to address shortfall
Grade R – how to address their needs in schools that are already overcrowded and under-resourced.
Communication – WCED circular to inform EMDC and schools
Monitoring and Evaluation – City of Cape Town EHPs visit schools 2x year
Advocacy – raise public awareness of school sanitation
- influence decision makers to prioritise and budget for sanitation
Ratios – clarify acceptable minimum standards
- currently no budget allocation to address shortfall
Grade R – how to address their needs in schools that are already overcrowded and under-resourced.