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Disposable diaper consumption in sub-Saharan Africa: Estimating the risks of associated unsafe waste

Disposable diaper consumption in sub-Saharan Africa: Estimating the risks of associated unsafe waste
Disposable diaper consumption in sub-Saharan Africa: Estimating the risks of associated unsafe waste
Disposable diaper use is widespread in many low- and middle-income countries whilst waste collection services are scarce. Despite the potential environmental and public health impacts of disposable diaper consumption by households lacking waste services, an international system for monitoring such consumption is lacking. This study therefore aims to develop and evaluate a method for estimating disposable diaper use based on secondary data, specifically nationally representative household expenditure surveys. Disposable diaper expenditure reported via household expenditure surveys for Nigeria (from 2018–19), Kenya (2015–16) and Ghana (2016–17) was used to estimate national disposable diaper consumption among households lacking waste collection services. To assess plausibility of reported expenditure, consumption-smoothing was examined, and Receiver Operating Curve analysis was used to infer mean toilet-training age. In Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria, households lacking appropriately managed waste services consumed an estimated 19 million, 210 million and 285 million disposable diapers per year (292 child/year, 433 child/year and 59 child/year among nappy-consuming households), respectively. Mean toilet-training ages were 24 to 30 months. Disposable diaper purchasing patterns showed evidence of consumption-smoothing among poorer households. Where commodity coding allows, household expenditure surveys can be used to construct internationally comparable indicators depicting disposable diaper consumption among households lacking waste services. Such indicators could be used to advocate for accelerated diaper product innovation, and target areas with high disposable diaper consumption but low waste service coverage.
2767-3197
Thomas-Possee, Mair L.H.
c43a2135-6dbc-4fc4-9c69-cd9ece0623b1
Shaw, Peter J.
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Bain, Robert E.S.
bc014460-35d7-4e81-8a01-0cf114356b46
Hill, Allan G.
5b17aa71-0c14-4fbf-8bc9-807c8294d4ae
Okotto-Okotto, Joseph
a8cb5abe-ee03-4c93-978b-b02a02350e26
Okotto, Lorna G.
a1c1e0d9-0d02-4d17-82e2-4eb20228a5c4
Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli
f65e625e-75bd-4463-9117-ed68e6f00067
Wright, Jim A.
94990ecf-f8dd-4649-84f2-b28bf272e464
Thomas-Possee, Mair L.H.
c43a2135-6dbc-4fc4-9c69-cd9ece0623b1
Shaw, Peter J.
935dfebf-9fb6-483c-86da-a21dba8c1989
Bain, Robert E.S.
bc014460-35d7-4e81-8a01-0cf114356b46
Hill, Allan G.
5b17aa71-0c14-4fbf-8bc9-807c8294d4ae
Okotto-Okotto, Joseph
a8cb5abe-ee03-4c93-978b-b02a02350e26
Okotto, Lorna G.
a1c1e0d9-0d02-4d17-82e2-4eb20228a5c4
Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli
f65e625e-75bd-4463-9117-ed68e6f00067
Wright, Jim A.
94990ecf-f8dd-4649-84f2-b28bf272e464

Thomas-Possee, Mair L.H., Shaw, Peter J., Bain, Robert E.S., Hill, Allan G., Okotto-Okotto, Joseph, Okotto, Lorna G., Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli and Wright, Jim A. (2024) Disposable diaper consumption in sub-Saharan Africa: Estimating the risks of associated unsafe waste. PLOS Sustainability and Transformation, 3 (4), [e0000106]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pstr.0000106).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Disposable diaper use is widespread in many low- and middle-income countries whilst waste collection services are scarce. Despite the potential environmental and public health impacts of disposable diaper consumption by households lacking waste services, an international system for monitoring such consumption is lacking. This study therefore aims to develop and evaluate a method for estimating disposable diaper use based on secondary data, specifically nationally representative household expenditure surveys. Disposable diaper expenditure reported via household expenditure surveys for Nigeria (from 2018–19), Kenya (2015–16) and Ghana (2016–17) was used to estimate national disposable diaper consumption among households lacking waste collection services. To assess plausibility of reported expenditure, consumption-smoothing was examined, and Receiver Operating Curve analysis was used to infer mean toilet-training age. In Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria, households lacking appropriately managed waste services consumed an estimated 19 million, 210 million and 285 million disposable diapers per year (292 child/year, 433 child/year and 59 child/year among nappy-consuming households), respectively. Mean toilet-training ages were 24 to 30 months. Disposable diaper purchasing patterns showed evidence of consumption-smoothing among poorer households. Where commodity coding allows, household expenditure surveys can be used to construct internationally comparable indicators depicting disposable diaper consumption among households lacking waste services. Such indicators could be used to advocate for accelerated diaper product innovation, and target areas with high disposable diaper consumption but low waste service coverage.

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Accepted/In Press date: 6 March 2024
Published date: 16 April 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489260
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489260
ISSN: 2767-3197
PURE UUID: bbff2587-0e44-4846-a057-c666f55f66aa
ORCID for Mair L.H. Thomas-Possee: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1899-2434
ORCID for Peter J. Shaw: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0925-5010
ORCID for Allan G. Hill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4418-0379
ORCID for Jim A. Wright: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8842-2181

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Date deposited: 18 Apr 2024 16:50
Last modified: 30 Nov 2024 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Peter J. Shaw ORCID iD
Author: Robert E.S. Bain
Author: Allan G. Hill ORCID iD
Author: Joseph Okotto-Okotto
Author: Lorna G. Okotto
Author: Mawuli Dzodzomenyo
Author: Jim A. Wright ORCID iD

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