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Award Winning Photo
Award winning photo featured on the cover page of the 2023 US Report on Aid to the People of Uganda.
Advancing Design Equity in Uganda Schools
Imagine you are a 14-year-old girl in Uganda. You love school and dream of attending university one day. But each month, you miss a week of classes. The school’s latrines are not separated by gender, often unkept, and do not offer a safe and private place to change and dispose of used pads—so you stay home.
Celebrating an Early Adopter
Fifty-one year-old George Okumu is a farmer based in BaroLemo village in Gulu district. He is married to two wives and has nine children. George attended a community training on sanitation and learned how basic sanitation services hold promise for healthier families. After learning, George volunteered to be the team leader of the Sanitation Committee in his village.
USAID Q1-2024 Acholi Newsletter (draft)
The USAID Local Partner Health Services (LPHS)—Ankole and Acholi Activity championed the 2023 pre-World AIDS Day commemoration activities in the Acholi sub-region. These pre-WAD events were held at four different locations: Gulu University in Gulu City, Bobi HC III and Pukony in Odek subcounty, Omoro district; Awach HC IV and a community served by the HC IV in Gulu district.
The Value of a Toilet
3.6 billion people globally still live without access to safely managed sanitation and over 494 million still practicing open defecation. Safely managed sanitation is a toilet that is not shared by other households and has a washable floor where human excreta is hygienically separated from human contact and is disposed of safely. In Uganda, according to the Water and Environment Sector Report 2020, only 78% have access to toilets and…
Taking Sanitation into their Own Hands
Although the overall toilet coverage in Uganda is at 77.2%, open defecation is still high at 22.9% and 12.1% in rural and urban area respectively, hand washing with soap at 36% in the rural areas and 40% in urban areas according to the Water and Environment Sector Performance Report 2019. Open defecation rate is highest in the north at (18%), in some rural districts as high as 51%.