Water Safety Plans (WSPs) improve the quality and secure the quantity of drinking water supplies, and hence improve public health outcomes. In developing countries such as Nepal, thousands of residents die each year as a result of poor water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services and WSPs show great promise for improving both health and livelihoods. The Nepali Non-Governmental Organisation Nepal Water for Health (NEWAH) has been working in partnership with Engineers Without Borders Australia and WaterAid Nepal to develop a WSP methodology suited to rural, community-managed water supply systems. Three pilot projects were undertaken incorporating community-based hazard management into the standard World Health Organization and Nepali Department of Water Supply and Sewerage WSP approaches. The successes and challenges of these pilots were assessed, and it was determined that community education, behaviour change, and the distribution of simplified WSP documentation to households and managers were essential to implementing successful WSPs within this context. This new WSP methodology is currently being mainstreamed throughout all of NEWAH's WASH projects in rural Nepal, as well as being shared with the wider Nepali WASH sector.
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Research Article|
May 06 2013
Water safety planning: adapting the existing approach to community-managed systems in rural Nepal
Dani Barrington;
1Nepal Water for Health, Lohasal, Kathmandu
E-mail: [email protected]
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Kathryn Fuller;
Kathryn Fuller
1Nepal Water for Health, Lohasal, Kathmandu
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Andrew McMillan
Andrew McMillan
1Nepal Water for Health, Lohasal, Kathmandu
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Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (2013) 3 (3): 392–401.
Article history
Received:
September 17 2012
Accepted:
March 19 2013
Citation
Dani Barrington, Kathryn Fuller, Andrew McMillan; Water safety planning: adapting the existing approach to community-managed systems in rural Nepal. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 1 September 2013; 3 (3): 392–401. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2013.120
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