Water and Sanitation

  • Oxfam Guidelines for Cholera Epidemics

    Oxfam's Cholera Outbreak Guidelines, now available.

  • Community health mobilizer in DRC

     

    Carolline Urebi is a community health mobiliser in Ituru district, DRC. She currently in the head of the local committee set up by the health ministry. In response to the cholera outbreak in Ituri district Oxfam set up two large water treatment units; treating water from the city’s Ngezi river with aluminium sulphate and then chlorinating it so that it’s safe to use.

    Copyright: Caroline Gluck/Oxfam

  • Blog post

    Oxfam's Cholera Outbreak Guidelines were developed as an internal resource, but today we are sharing them externally in order to seek input from the international humanitarian community. We hope that this feedback will inform later editions in order to develop a powerful resource for anyone looking to prepare for, prevent, and control a cholera outbreak. Here, one of the authors of the Guidelines, Bibi Lamond, explains more.

    I have been responsible for implementing and coordinating cholera outbreak programmes since 2006. In my work I have found that, although there are numerous documents and books on medical intervention for cholera control, there are no comprehensive water, sanitation and hygiene promotion (WASH) guidelines.

    Oxfam Guidelines for Cholera Epidemics

    Oxfam's Cholera Outbreak Guidelines, now available.

    Oxfam's new publication, the Cholera Outbreak Guidelines aims to meet this need and could set standards for other emergency WASH actors.

    The content of the Guidelines has evolved from firsthand field experience in Oxfam's emergency cholera programmes in Haiti, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, and Zimbabwe. It has also drawn on information from other NGOs, such as Médecins Sans Frontières, renowned for their cholera work in the field.

    We all know that rapid interventions are essential at the onset of a cholera outbreak to reduce preventable deaths. But, prior to the launch of these Guidelines, Oxfam WASH teams had no standardised way of designing cholera control activities. When Programme Managers asked for evidence of effective activities, WASH teams struggled. In terms of budget and staff numbers, cholera control programmes were often under-resourced from the very beginning due to a lack of guidance or lessons learned from past cholera programmes.

  • Woman and child search for drinking water in India

    A young woman and child search for drinking water across Machal Lake in India.

    © 2009 Kailash Mittal, Courtesy of Photoshare