The Aquaya Institute, PO Box 21862-00505, Nairobi, Kenya.
The Aquaya Institute, PO Box 21862-00505, Nairobi, Kenya.
Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2018 Jul;221(6):907-920. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.05.010. Epub 2018 May 31.
Water quality testing is critical for guiding water safety management and ensuring public health. In many settings, however, water suppliers and surveillance agencies do not meet regulatory requirements for testing frequencies. This study examines the conditions that promote successful water quality monitoring in Africa, with the goal of providing evidence for strengthening regulated water quality testing programs.
We compared monitoring programs among 26 regulated water suppliers and surveillance agencies across six African countries. These institutions submitted monthly water quality testing results over 18 months. We also collected qualitative data on the conditions that influenced testing performance via approximately 821 h of semi-structured interviews and observations. Based on our qualitative data, we developed the Water Capacity Rating Diagnostic (WaterCaRD) to establish a scoring framework for evaluating the effects of the following conditions on testing performance: accountability, staffing, program structure, finances, and equipment & services. We summarized the qualitative data into case studies for each of the 26 institutions and then used the case studies to score the institutions against the conditions captured in WaterCaRD. Subsequently, we applied fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA) to compare these scores against performance outcomes for water quality testing. We defined the performance outcomes as the proportion of testing Targets Achieved (outcome 1) and Testing Consistency (outcome 2) based on the monthly number of microbial water quality tests conducted by each institution. Our analysis identified motivation & leadership, knowledge, staff retention, and transport as institutional conditions that were necessary for achieving monitoring targets. In addition, equipment, procurement, infrastructure, and enforcement contributed to the pathways that resulted in strong monitoring performance.
Our identification of institutional commitment, comprising motivation & leadership, knowledge, and staff retention, as a key driver of monitoring performance was not surprising: in weak regulatory environments, individuals and their motivations take-on greater importance in determining institutional and programmatic outcomes. Nevertheless, efforts to build data collection capacity in low-resource settings largely focus on supply-side interventions: the provision of infrastructure, equipment, and training sessions. Our results indicate that these interventions will continue to have limited long-term impacts and sustainability without complementary strategies for motivating or incentivizing water supply and surveillance agency managers to achieve testing goals. More broadly, our research demonstrates both an experimental approach for diagnosing the systems that underlie service provision and an analytical strategy for identifying appropriate interventions.
水质检测对于指导水安全管理和确保公众健康至关重要。然而,在许多情况下,供水商和监测机构不符合检测频率的监管要求。本研究考察了促进非洲水质监测成功的条件,旨在为加强受监管的水质检测计划提供证据。
我们比较了六个非洲国家的 26 个受监管供水商和监测机构的监测计划。这些机构在 18 个月内每月提交水质检测结果。我们还通过大约 821 小时的半结构化访谈和观察收集了影响检测绩效的条件的定性数据。基于我们的定性数据,我们开发了水能力评级诊断(WaterCaRD),以建立一个评分框架,评估以下条件对检测绩效的影响:问责制、人员配备、计划结构、财务和设备与服务。我们将定性数据总结为 26 个机构的案例研究,然后使用案例研究根据 WaterCaRD 中捕获的条件对机构进行评分。随后,我们应用模糊集定性比较分析(fsQCA)将这些评分与水质检测的绩效结果进行比较。我们将绩效结果定义为每个机构每月进行的微生物水质测试数量所达到的测试目标的比例(结果 1)和测试一致性(结果 2)。我们的分析确定了激励和领导力、知识、员工保留以及运输是实现监测目标所必需的机构条件。此外,设备、采购、基础设施和执法有助于导致监测绩效强劲的途径。
我们确定机构承诺,包括激励和领导力、知识和员工保留,是监测绩效的关键驱动因素,这并不奇怪:在监管薄弱的环境中,个人及其动机在确定机构和计划结果方面更为重要。然而,在资源匮乏的环境中建立数据收集能力的努力主要集中在供应方干预措施上:提供基础设施、设备和培训课程。我们的研究结果表明,如果没有激励或激励供水商和监测机构管理人员实现检测目标的补充策略,这些干预措施将继续产生有限的长期影响和可持续性。更广泛地说,我们的研究既展示了一种用于诊断服务提供背后系统的实验方法,也展示了一种用于确定适当干预措施的分析策略。