Point-of-collection chlorine dispenser system in Kenya

September 26, 2012 · 1 comment

Social Engineering: Evidence from a Suite of Take-up Experiments in Kenya, 2011. (DRAFT)

Michael Kremer, et al.

Many effective health products and behaviors available through the private market are not widely adopted in less developed countries. For example, fewer than 10% of households in our Kenyan study area treat their water with dilute chlorine. Using a suite of randomized evaluations, we find that information and marketing interventions do little to boost use of chlorine. However, chlorine take-up is highly sensitive to price, convenience and social context, with more than half of households using chlorine when an individually-packaged supply is delivered free to the home.

The highest sustained takeup is achieved by combining free, convenient, salient, and public access through a point-of-collection chlorine dispenser system and a local promoter. More than half of households treat their water and this use continues 30 months later even though promoters are paid only for the first six months. The estimated long-run costs of this intervention at scale, including administrative costs, are between $.25 and $.50 per person per year.

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E Dhodho April 17, 2013 at 8:51 am

Hi Michael.
I have been implementing a POUWT project in Zimbabwe and just as you cite in your article consistent treatment in most rural areas is very low and I am very interested in point of collection water treatment combined a strong community system. Can i get more info on the technology

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