Victor Courtney, Ocasio Denisse Vega, Cumbe Zaida A, Garn Joshua V, Hubbard Sydney, Mangamela Magalhaes, McGunegill Sandy, Nalá Rassul, Snyder Jedidiah S, Levy Karen, Freeman Matthew C
Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
WEConsult, Maputo, Mozambique.
PLOS Water. 2022;1(6). doi: 10.1371/journal.pwat.0000022. Epub 2022 Jun 9.
Rapid urbanization, resulting in population growth within informal settlements, has worsened exclusion and inequality in access to water and sanitation (WASH) services in the poorest and most marginalized communities. In this study, we describe the heterogeneity in water service satisfaction and WASH access in low-income, peri-urban neighborhoods of Beira, Mozambique, and examine whether this heterogeneity can be explained by distance to water distribution mains. Using spatial statistics and regression analyses, we identify spatial heterogeneity in household WASH access, as well as consumer-reported satisfaction with water services (services, pressure, quality, and sufficient quantity). We find that as distance from the water main increased, both access to an improved water source at the household and satisfaction with water pressure decreases, and water supply intermittency increases, controlling for household density and socioeconomic status. The odds of a household having access to a water source at the household or on the compound decreases with every 100-meter increase in distance from a water main pipe (odds ratio [OR] 0.87, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.82, 0.92). Satisfaction with water services also decreases with every 100-meter increase in distance from a water main pipe (OR: 0.80; 95% CI: 0.69, 0.94). Days of availability in the past week decreases by a factor of 0.22 for every 100-meter increase in distance from the water main (95% CI: -0.29, -0.15). Findings from this study highlight the unequal household access to water and sanitation in urban informal settlements, even within low-income neighborhoods. Describing this heterogeneity of access to water services, sanitation, and satisfaction-and the factors influencing them-can inform stakeholders and guide the development of infrastructural solutions to reduce water access inequities within urban settings.
快速城市化导致非正规住区人口增长,加剧了最贫困和最边缘化社区在获得水和卫生设施(WASH)服务方面的排斥和不平等。在本研究中,我们描述了莫桑比克贝拉低收入城郊社区水服务满意度和WASH获取情况的异质性,并研究这种异质性是否可以用水管到供水主管道的距离来解释。通过空间统计和回归分析,我们确定了家庭WASH获取情况以及消费者报告的对水服务(服务、压力、质量和充足水量)满意度的空间异质性。我们发现,在控制家庭密度和社会经济地位的情况下,随着与供水主管道距离的增加,家庭获得改善水源的机会以及对水压的满意度下降,供水间歇性增加。家庭在住所或院子里获得水源的几率随着与供水主管道距离每增加100米而降低(优势比[OR]为0.87,95%置信区间[CI]:0.82,0.92)。对水服务的满意度也随着与供水主管道距离每增加100米而下降(OR:0.80;95%CI:0.69,0.94)。过去一周的供水天数随着与供水主管道距离每增加100米而减少0.22倍(95%CI:-0.29,-0.15)。本研究结果突出了城市非正规住区家庭在获得水和卫生设施方面的不平等,即使在低收入社区也是如此。描述水服务、卫生设施获取情况和满意度的这种异质性以及影响它们的因素,可以为利益相关者提供信息,并指导基础设施解决方案的制定,以减少城市环境中的用水不平等。