{"doc_desc":{"title":"DDI_UGA_UNHCR_KAP_2019_Kyangwali","idno":"DDI_UGA_2019_WASH-KYA_v01_M","producers":[{"name":"David WO Oremo","abbreviation":"","affiliation":"UNHCR Bureau for East, Horn & The Great Lakes Region","role":"Regional Microdata Curator"}],"prod_date":"2021-04-02","version_statement":{"version":"Version 1 (April 2021). This version is identical to UNHCR DDI ID: DDI_UGA_UNHCR_KAP_2019_Kyangwali_v1.0 except the following edits were made:\n- Minor spelling and grammatical corrections\n- Specified the archive where study is originally stored"}},"study_desc":{"title_statement":{"idno":"UGA_2019_WASH-KYA_v01_M","title":"WASH KAP Survey Kyangwali Refugee Camp, November 2019"},"authoring_entity":[{"name":"UNHCR","affiliation":""}],"version_statement":{"version":"v1.0:  Basic raw data, obtained from data entry (before editing).","version_date":"2020-02-06"},"study_info":{"topics":[{"topic":"Water Sanitation Hygiene","vocab":"","uri":""}],"abstract":"Uganda is hosting over 1 million refugees with about 114,716 (OPM Nov 2019) of them settled in Kyangwali refugee settlement. This rapid influx of refugees has put pressure on basic social services including education, food, shelter and WASH infrastructure. In order to efficiently and effectively improve WASH service delivery in the settlement, there is need for accurate and reliable information on which to base programmatic decisions. \n\nKyangwali settlement has had a number of interventions by different partners, and in as much as there were access indicators obtained regularly by the partners that provide extremely useful average figures at settlement level, there has been a gap in the in-depth understanding of the situation at household level and to account for disparities within the settlement so as to measure the impact of the interventions. \n\nThe survey mainly utilized 2 methods: Household questionnaire survey and documentary review. The survey covered all the five zones of the settlement, with samples drawn from all the villages in the different zones. Sample sizes for each zone were calculated using the UNHCR sample size determination tool. A sample of 403 (only refugees) was interviewed using household questionnaire survey administered through Kobo collect and Open Data Kit (ODK) tool. Reviewed documents included: partners periodic updates, minutes of WASH meetings.","coll_dates":[{"start":"2019-11-01","end":"2019-11-30","cycle":""}],"nation":[{"name":"Uganda","abbreviation":"UGA"}],"geog_coverage":"Kyangwali Refuge settlement","analysis_unit":"Households","universe":"Entire members of the household","data_kind":"Sample survey data [ssd]","notes":"Water Quantity \n  \u00b7Average litres of potable water\/per person\/per day collected at HH level; % HHs with at least 10 L\/p protected water storage capacity\nWater Access \n  \u00b7Maximum distance [m] from household to potable water collection point\nWater Quality \n  \u00b7% HHs collecting drinking water from protected\/treated sources\nSanitation \n  \u00b7% HHs with household latrine\/toilet, \n  \u00b7% HHs reporting defecating in a toilet\/latrine, \n  \u00b7% HHs practicing open defecation (Includes defecating in the bush at night and children under 5 years of age 28), \n  \u00b7% HHs having access to a bathing facility\nHygiene \n  \u00b7% HHs with access to soap, \n  \u00b7% HHs with access to a specific hand-washing device, \n  \u00b7% respondents knowing at least 3 critical moments when to wash hands\nSolid Waste \n  \u00b7% HHs with access to solid waste disposal facility\nWater Supply\/Source \n  \u00b7Most of the households (85%) fetch water from a protected source such as handpump\/bore hole, public tap\/standpipe and protected spring. \n  \u00b7Most of the of the households (64%) reported hand pumps\/borehole as their main source of drinking water for members in the household compared to \n  \u00b7(38%) who reported public tap\/standpipe. \n  \u00b7Adult females (61%), children (11-18 years) (30%), adult male (6%) and children (10 years or younger) (3%) are responsible to fetch water for domestic use.  \n  \u00b7Average litres of potable water\/per person\/per day collected at HH level \n  \u00b7At least 10 L\/p protected water storage capacity\n  \u00b7Distance from the household to water point \n  \u00b7Over half of the households (61%) clean their containers every time they use them, followed by (36%) of the households who clean their containers at least once in a week. The rest 3% clean their containers once in a month.)\nSanitation \n  \u00b7Access to household latrine\n  \u00b7Access to communal latrine \n  \u00b7Open defecation\n  \u00b7Access to a designated shower\/bathing facility \nWaste management \n  \u00b7Access to solid waste disposal facility\n  \u00b7The household pit. \n  \u00b7Designated open area\n  \u00b7Undesignated open area, \n  \u00b7Burn domestic waste, \n  \u00b7Dispose in communal"},"method":{"data_collection":{"data_collectors":[{"name":"UNHCR","abbreviation":"","affiliation":""}],"sampling_procedure":"Stratified random sampling","coll_mode":"Computer Assisted Personal Interview [capi]","weight":"No info presented; to be computed post hoc"}},"data_access":{"dataset_availability":{"original_archive":"United Nations Refugee Agency Microdata Library\nhttps:\/\/microdata.unhcr.org\/index.php\/catalog\/213\nOriginal Archive Study ID: DDI_UGA_UNHCR_KAP_2019_Kyangwali_v1.0\nCost: None"}}},"schematype":"survey","tags":[{"tag":"noDOI"}]}