Of late, there have been plenty of discussions around the topic of sanitation, which have focussed on building toilets on a massive scale. These are in the aftermath of the new and recently released Millennium Development Goals Report 2014 by the United Nations that shows that India has the world's largest population that defecates out in the open, with it being as high as 66% in rural India [1].
This, despite efforts to achieve universal sanitation coverage since 1986 through constructing toilets under government schemes such as the Central Rural Sanitation Programme, the Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC), and the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan. However, most of the toilets remain unused [5]. The new NDA government has now launched Swacch Bharat Abhiyan to deal with this problem [12].
But is it enough to just build toilets?
A study conducted by the Research Institute for Compassionate Economics, Uttar Pradesh, from rural households in Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Rajasthan has made some very surprising and embarrassing revelations. It has found that although 40 percent of the households in these states have a functional toilet, at least one member from the household chooses to defecate out in the open [3, 6].
So why do people with a functional toilet at home still defecate out in the open?
This question, which has left a number of policy makers, planners, researchers and scientists perplexed, finds its answer in experiences gained from certain states in the country.
Latrine building efforts by the government through subsidies have been unsuccessful as they have been unable to address deeper social forces such as caste-based social divides that influence the adoption of toilets. [9]. The studies discussed have added a new dimension to intervention efforts directed at sanitation and have revealed the intricacies in decision making patterns at the community level that influence not only taking up, but the using of of toilets. The studies show that:
This is a gradual process, though. As new norms begin to become entrenched in a community, there comes a tipping point, or a point at which a high enough proportion of the population has adopted the new process, after which it spreads rapidly and gradually uproots the earlier norm [9].
Interventions directed at sanitation must take into consideration the complex social processes that influence toilet acceptance in a community and move away from the blanket, supply-based target-oriented strategies that yield no results in the long run. Experience has shown that localised, community-based efforts that involve and take into consideration all sections of the community, bring about a gradual change in the health behaviour of people through convincing of the community and aiding them to make their own decisions.