Saturday, November 24, 2012

Starbucks Community Needs Assessment


Jai and Mtemi (the Starbucks Agronomist)
PATH recently received funding from Starbucks Foundation for the purpose of strengthening safe water and sanitation in coffee growing communities they buy from as part of their cooperate responsibility.  Jai and I are here to start this project by conducting a rapid community needs assessment in their areas of interest.  The premise of our proposal to Starbucks was to work with communities to identify the needs and gaps that need to be filled in water and sanitation and then work with them to design the appropriate intervention and then implement that intervention.  That may sound like a logical chain of events to people reading this blog, but actually, in my opinion, it is rarely done in global health.  Sadly, more often than not, we decide on an intervention and then go into a community without first consulting the community to see if they think the intervention is appropriate.  Personally, I have been a part of a number of these interventions in the past 10 years and I think this is a bit of a backwards approach.  All that aside, let’s faces it, who doesn’t want to work with coffee growing communities in Southeastern Tanzania?!   Jai and I are pumped to be here.  ; )

Closeup coffee plant
So, how do you conduct a community needs assessment?  Good question!  I had no clue before consulting a few people at PATH much more experienced in these assessments than I am.  They offered a plethora of suggestions and then we came up with our own design of participatory learning approaches (PLAs) to make up our assessment.  While here, we will be conducting 4 different data exercises in 6 communities that the local Starbucks Farmer Support Center (SFSC) selected. 

 Those data collection activities are:
·         Focus group discussions among farmers and non-farmers from each community
·         In-depth interviews with community stakeholders
·         Water testing
·         Asset mapping (visually verifying a checklist of assets while walking through a community)
Water sampling from a spring used for drinking water
We started water testing and asset mapping today while waiting for local ethical approval to start the community discussions and interviews.

As an aside, Starbucks has been buying coffee from the Arusha (Northern) area of Tanzania for quite a while but they are only now starting programs in this Southeaster region.  Personally, I think it is pretty cool that they are already starting a water and sanitation intervention in communities they are only yet thinking of buying from.   Don’t get me wrong, I still enjoy the hell out of a Seattle independent coffee shop but good for Starbucks for doing something worthwhile in areas of the less developed world that they purchase coffee beans from.


Monday, November 19, 2012

Southern Highlands

Mambo from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania!  After 34 hours of travel time sans layovers we have arrived in Mbeya, Tanzania.  I am traveling with my coworker extraordinaire, Jai Sutherland.  I am lucky to have such an awesome, bright, and fun traveling companion.

Travel time breakdown:
  • Seattle --->Amsterdam = 10 hour flight
  • Amsterdam ----> Kilimanjaro = 8 hour flight
  • Kilimanjaro ----> Dar = 1 hour flight
  • Dar ---> Mbeya = 15 hour drive
I think these US to Africa travels seem much longer to me than they used to.  Well they are longer from Seattle.  Haha!  I can say it was totally worth it.  It is absolutely beautiful here.  As in...I LOVE IT!!!  No big surprises there.  This is Tanzania. 

The travels have not been without their hiccups - thus far we have encountered a seemingly corrupt and hostile immigration situation, customs red tape to relinquish water testing equipment, nearly hitting a cow in the road, hitting and killing a LARGE African bird, stopping to pee at a brothel, and nearly getting killed by a bus.  All that being said, I couldn't be happier to be here.  I love me some Africa.

On the drive from Dar to Mbeya we were lucky enough to drive through Mikumi National Park where we saw elephants, giraffe, water buffalo, gazelles, warthogs, and monkeys.
                                            



We are now in Mbeya staying at the "Peace of Mind" rest house.  It is colorful and nice.  The ceiling inside is even painted in a turquoise giraffe pattern.  The bed is large and comfy and I would say I am about 90% recovered from jet lag.
                                                        
The Southern Highlands are considered the "food basket" of Tanzania.  This is the major agricultural center of the county.  The region is dominated by volcanic soil which is rich in nutrients ideal for producing bananas, maize, beans, tea, and coffee.


We have been in Mbeya for the last two nights and head to Mbozi tomorrow where we will be conducting our project.  The town of Mbeya is very close to the border of Zambia and Malawi and Lake Nyasa, which I recently learned is the same as Lake Malawi.  As you may have guess a lake spanning two countries comes into dispute often and could be called two names by each respective country.


Tomorrow we travel to Mbozi, the final destination on our tour of Southeastern Tanzania where we will be doing our project.  What project you say?!  Stay tuned for the next post!


Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Khmer Food Adventures

Pa-cock!
So....eating in Cambodia has been a bit rough for Anna and I.  Pretty much everyday presents a new challenge and we have come to admit the novelty of Khmer food is fading fast.  Especially as we enter week 3 of field work.  The good news is weight loss is likely kicking in at this point.

I do recognize a familiar pattern with myself while traveling that goes like this:
  • Week 1:  Hey, this isn't so bad.
  • Week 2:  Hmmm....I wonder what I am going to eat today.  I hope I like it.
  • Week 3:  Damn, I really miss Mexican food (we are currently at this phase)
This is not always the patten, like say in Thailand or Vietnam, but lets just say I am feeling especially food challenged on this trip.

Said restaurant in question
 The first day of field testing (between week 1 and week 2) we were out in Kampong Speu with the study team and Anna and I had  a record bizarre foods challenge.  The study team suggested we go to a "resort" in the area for lunch that was by a nice pagoda with monkeys and a river.  Prior to lunch Anna and I decided we would be more adventurous with our food choices.

Initially, things were going well including ordering a fried chicken that arrived with its head and feet (above).  At this point, Anna and I were still hanging strong.  Sonita insisted on ordering a soup despite my numerous attempts to avert the situation (our previous two soup encounters had been sketchy).  Ultimately a soup arrived.  Below is a play by play:

IRL study managers insists that we try the soup
Anna:  (Acting interested) What kind of meat is in the soup?
IRL:  It is like a cow that you find in the wild but smaller and not a cow
Anna:  Oh.  Ok I haven’t heard of that animal
Liz begrudgingly takes a small ladle of soup on her rice
Liz:  But Sonita, there are bug in it (not just bugs but large insets that resemble trader jackets)
Anna hears “But Sonita, there are bones in it” and thinks to herself, come on Liz we are trying to be more adventurous
Sonita:  Yes, it is ok to eat it
Liz pushes the insects to the side and takes a bite of the broth + rice and almost voms
Liz looks over to Anna who is getting a large ladle of soup and wondering what the f%^k is she doing.
 Liz continues to watch Anna in horror taking large bites of the soup. 
Half way through Anna experience she looks over to Liz realizing there are large insects in her soup and wondering why Liz didn’t warn her.

Pork grizzle
In addition to the bug soup there was also this lovely pork dish that we were forced to try that was not half-bad aside from the large chunks of grizzle.

Did I mention that I am happy to be getting home right in time for Cinco de Mayo?!


Sunday, April 29, 2012

Cambodia


Sua s'dei from SE Asia!  Coming to you from Cambodia where I have been for the past two weeks.  I am working on a final evaluation for our most successful Safe Water pilot.   I pushed hard to do this evaluation on our own without the assistance of an outside research firm like Abt Associates.  As mentioned in my performance review this year, "Liz would benefit from a return to direct research as this is truly her passion and interest."  Great.  Agreed.  This is one of such efforts. 

I am fortunate to be accompanied on this trip by Ms. Anna Larsen, program assistant extraordinaire at PATH.  Anna applied for an ONP grant (Opportunities for New Professionals) from PATH to come to Cambodia and learn some evaluation skills by working with me on this project.  Anna is amazingly good at her job, very bright, enthusiastic, and overall a really good time to travel with.  In addition, to the evaluation work, we have discovered we are well-matched shopping partners and have been throwing it down in the Russian market in Phnom Penh.  After day 1 in the field we realized we needed hats so we bought matching one at the market.  The top zips off and it doubles as a visor...totally ridiculous but yet so useful.

This is my second trip to Cambodia and once again I am reminded how much I really enjoy working in this area of the world.  It is the hottest time of year in Cambodia; at the tail end of the dry season, directly preceding the rainy season.  On a recent day in the field, temperatures soared over 40 degrees Celsius (approximately 104 Fahrenheit).  Needless to say it is very hot and humid and I basically have not stopped sweating since I got here...yuck. Lucky for me, both hotels we have stayed at thus far have swimming pools.  Life saver!!

Countryside in Kampong Speu

Our pilot was in Kampong Speu province (pronounced Kampong Spur) and ran from February to December of 2011.  The pilot tested the sale of a ceramic water filter, The Super Tunsai (Tunsai = rabbit in Khmer = lucky), through a micro finance institution (MFI) that issued small loans for the purchase of the water filter.  Interestingly, a version of a ceramic water filter (the Tunsai) has been on the market in Cambodia for well over a decade but never achieved appreciable levels of penetration on the Cambodia market.  In our previous evaluations we found that 4-6% of households in the study area were using a ceramic water filter.  During the pilot phase we tested the hypothesis that households may not like the filter that has been around for a decade and they may not be able to afford it without a financing mechanism.  The original product, the Tunsai, and the redesigned product, Super Tunsai can be seen and read about here:  http://www.hydrologichealth.com/category/social-marketing/.  If interested, please watch this You Tube video clip of the country-wide commercial released for the promotion of Super Tunsai.  While marginally patriarcical, in my opinion, the commercial appears to have blanketed awareness of the new product across our pilot area. 

As mentioned, this is the most successful of the nine pilots we launched through the Safe Water project.  On an endline evaluation in November we showed that uptake of a ceramic water pot increased from 6% at baesline to 43% among microfinance clients and 21% of the general populations in Kampong Speu.  We are very pleased with these results and feel that partnering with a microfinance institution allowed households to afford a $22 water filter that they normally could not afford without financing.  Interestingly, when the two filters were sold side by side the Super Tunsai outsold the regular Tunsai 3 to 1 despite is price that was nearly double the original Tunsai; $22 compared to $12.50.  I guess people in this area really did prefer the new and improved product option.  Perhaps the best news about this pilot is after it ended in December both partners signed an agreement to scale-up to other provinces in the country without PATH's assistance which is what you would hope for as the NGO assisting with implementation of the project. 

Interview of a MFI client with a Super Tunsai in her home
Because of the success of this pilot we decided to do an additional round of evaluation to take a closer look at why the pilot was so successful which brings us to the current purpose of the trip.  Anna and I are here conducting an assessment to take a closer look into the MFI pilot model.  Specifically we are conducting a quantitative and qualitative assessment to learn about client perceptions and quality of life improvements since households took the microfinance loan to purchase the Super Tunsai.  For the last two weeks we have been focused on launching the quantitative assessment among 1000 rural households in Kampong Speu province.  Tomorrow we start work with a different research firm to start the qualitative assessment.  From this assessment we are interested in learning more about what people like/dislike about the Super Tunsai and why they may not have wanted to take the loan when they attended a meeting to hear about it.

So, far things are going well and it is fun to be on a project learning about the successes (as opposed to the failures).  Both local research firms we are working with are well-qualified making our job a little easier.  I am a bit behind on blogging this trip but plan on a few more within the next week.  Stay tuned....

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Gieta

School kids in Gieta
Mwanza province is located in the Northwestern part of Tanzania along the Southern shores of Lake Victoria.  For Anna and I to get Gieta we had to take a 1.5 hour flight from Dar, followed by a 1 hour drive, followed by a 30-minute ferry ride across a section of Lake Vic, and then another 1.5 hour drive from there.  Needless to say, it was a long haul which included a round-trip flight on ‘Fly 540’, a local airline with really small planes (Liz no likey!). 

Mwanza is the second largest town in Tanzania and Gieta is a rural district located within Mwanza.  Gieta is a welcome contrast from Dar and reminiscent of the areas I know and love so well in Western Kenya.  The geography is characterized by rolling hillsides and farm land with traditional houses scattered sporadically though out the countryside.  The weather was a welcomed change from Dar with temperatures in the mid 60’s at night and mid 80’s during the day.   The air quality was also much better and I was able to heal from the respiratory problems I had in Dar.

Lake Victoria
We chose Gieta because it was an area rumored to have cholera outbreaks and poor water and sanitation conditions.  When we interviewed the medical officer in charge at Gieta District Hospital he told us there has not been a cholera outbreak there in the past few years but they still have plenty of enteric disease problems including amoebic dysentery, bloody diarrhea, and worm infestations.  I was comforted that it was still an appropriate study sight. 

Industry in Gieta is dominated by the Gieta gold mine which is the second largest gold mine in the country.  The gold mine is owned by AngloGold Ashanti, headquartered in South Africa and employees hundreds of local miners.    The upswing regarding the presence of the gold mine is that we were able to find a decent hotel for the week with a rocking Internet connection.  The downfall of the mine is there are a lot of tensions between the owners and the local people in regards to water and sanitation.  According to the locals, the Gold mine owners are busy exploiting the countries natural resources while promising (but never delivering) safe water to the people.  When we enquired about this further, apparently the gold mine wanted to deliver a pumped (and chlorinated!) system from Lake Victoria, and plans were drawn up to start work, and then the local government put it to a halt demanding that the mining company pay them directly instead of installing the system.   The mining owners were concerned about corruption and had no guarantee that the local government would deliver…..sigh….needless to say no such piped chlorinated water system exists and the truth probably lies somewhere in between.  We were able to conduct a full sample in Gieta which included 8 households and 4 stakeholder interviews.  Here are some Gieta highlights:

Household well
  • Most households obtain their drinking water from informal, shallow wells that are on their property or shared among a few neighbors
  • Most people boil or filter their water with a white cloth
  •  There is great concern among individuals in the area that water is contaminated from blasted particles in the gold mine and they are concerned about water pollution from mercury and other chemical contaminants.
  • Several households report problems with amoebic dysentery
  • Almost all households store their water in traditional clay pots which they dip cups into to have a drink of water
  •  Households have some form of a pit latrine, of which I have attached a photo of the most interesting.  This woman reported spreading hot ash on the logs over morning to kill all the bacteria (novel!).  The size of the opening is approximately the size of a tennis ball (yikes) and she reported pouring salt down it to dissolve “the solids.”

Pit Latrine
One of the most interesting interviews we conducted was among the wife/wives of a prominent “witch doctor.”  To get to the house, we crossed a stream and hiked up a sharp hill (pants pulled up over the knees) to interview some hard to reach households.  These households were very interesting and were predominantly constructed of grass thatches.  They most closely resembled mobile communities I had only previously seen photos of in Northern Kenya with housing structures called manayattas.  The household set up looked like a traditional African compound with multiple small huts for various wives and kids. 

We entered one such lively compound with quite a crowd, most men, seated in an open air waiting hut and the women (around 10) were gathered in another section of the household.  Anna approached the group of women and asked if one of them would be interested in talking about water and sanitation for the compound.  The eldest wife agree and then about 2 additional women and 6 or so children followed us over to a quiet(er) area for the interview.   

Traditional households in Gieta
At this point Anna started to notice all kinds of interesting signs of witchcraft including 2 small treatment huts with several plastic storage containers outside for tincture mixtures.   The men sitting in that open air waiting hut were waiting to be seen.  Altered to the “signs”, Anna inquired if the husband practices witchcraft and the women, who were his two wives, said he was one of the most famous doctors in the area.  At that point he came out of the treatment hut and introduced himself.  He was a young (looking), charismatic man with interesting scars on his face.  He inquired what we were doing with his wives and then mentioned that he is a doctor and if we need anything he will gladly offer his services.  At that point, I started being superstitious and couldn’t take a photo of him but I did get some nice shots of his wives and children.

They were all very kind.  As commonly encountered with polygamy in Africa, the women operate as a family until and hang out together, distribute all the household chores, help raise each others’ kids, and appear to be very good friends.  The two wives of the ‘doctor’ asked Anna to explain to me that they are very good friends and like to have their photo taken together.  As always when I encounter this in different cultures I am left questioning the concept of jealously.

Wives of the witch doctor
During our half-hour walk to their water source (a protected spring) I was able to ask the first wife some pressings questions I had.  I enquired about the most common issues for which people come visit her husband.  She listed the following common reasons; sexual performance problems, fertility problems, issues with work and employers (even if I thought about it for a split second, I did not seek services – ha!)

There were also miniature straw huts scattered around the compound that looked like they may house chickens.  Later Anna told me that the doctor would extract the problem you were experiencing in your soul and place it into one of the miniature huts, then when you came back to the doctor you would check on it and make sure it was safely transforming in the mini-hut or at least that is what I understood form the Swahili/English translation.

Small huts for spirits
Interviewing this household was a fascinating experience and I whole-heatedly appreciated their willingness to let me into their compound, be open and honest about the way they live, hospitable and welcoming, and to teach me about a culture that I had never previously known.   I love days like this in the field.  ; )  Gotta soak them up before coming back to dreary meeting office time in Seattle.

Love,

Liz 


Saturday, February 25, 2012

Dar

Well it's official....I LOVE Tanzania.  And I love conducting this research.  All and all this has been a superb experience thus far and is a timely reminder for me of why I got into this field in the first place.  ; )  But then again, how often is is that I don't like somewhere in East Africa (ha!).


This is not to say this trip has been easy on me physically and mentally.  The first few days after I arriving I caught an upper respiratory infection that left me voiceless and feeling pretty crappy up until now.  In addition, the upper 90's scalding hot temperatures of Dar caused an unpleasant heat rash that just made me look more awkward (white with red splotches) during our interviews.  Combine those two physical maladies with working 12-14 hour days, because apparently the work never stops in Seattle, and you have got someone who will really be ready for vacation on March the 3rd!  Eyes on the prize...


Week 1 of the trip was spend in Dar es Salaam, the largest city in Tanzania.
A couple of fun facts and first impressions of Dar:
  • Dar es Salaam, Arabic for "harbour of peace", is a lively, vibrant East African city located right on the Indian Ocean with an urban population of over 2 million, ~60% living in slums...and thus our work begins.
  • As previously mentioned it is hot as hell in Dar.  Part of our assessment is measuring the ambient temperatures outside which were all over 95 degrees each day I measured.  To further complicate matters it is dry and dusty before the rains start in March.  
  • My other point of reference for large East African cities is Nairobi and I would consider Dar much like Nairobi but hotter, more muslin, and less dangerous.  The latter two observations might not be entirely unrelated with less alcohol availability and less carousing.  
  • Tanzanians are super friendly and welcoming.  Greetings are a really big thing here.  When someone passes you on the street you greet each other.  I read somewhere that this is part of Tanzanian culture in order to "keep up good relations."  This is really cool to me and a far cry of the introverted attitude of Seattlites with strangers.  Brings me right back to my Texas roots.
My first day in Tanzania I hired Anna Meleiya, a gorgeous 27 year old Tanzanian, as a research consultant for our study.  I knew when I interviewed her than she would be great!  She is currently working on her Masters degree in Occupational Health and her thesis is exploring health effects of Tanzanian miners.  As the name may imply, Tanzania is rich in natural resources, mainly Tanzinites (blue gem) and Gold.  Anna  is from a town called Arusha and has done quite a bit of qualitative research and is a skilled interviewer.  Among other talents, she is a Kiswahili teacher to foreigners.  Lucky for me!  We spend all of our days together and I feel really fortunate to have her working on this project.  She is a joy to be around and very interested in sharpening her skill set on our project.  Bottom line, Anna rocks!


Most of my previous research was focused around quantitative research.  Quantitative research is designed to quantify "who is doing what" in a population.  In contrast, qualitative research, the research we are doing in this study, is designed to answer "why" people are doing whatever are the behaviors of interest.  In our current research project we are looking to understand why people have the behaviors they do with water and sanitation practices.  PATH puts quite a bit of value on qualitative research which I am gaining a new-found appreciation for in my current position.


Our study consists of semi-structured, in -depth interviews of households and stakeholders.  The interviews rely heavily on open-ended questions and observations from the households.  There is a large media component to the data we are collecting including still photography, videography, and audio recordings.  After we spent two days in training, we hit the field in Dar.  The first part of our study took placer in Buguruni Ward, a slum on the outskirts of Dar.  Buguruni is densely populated and sadly reminiscent of the slums I have working in in Nairobi.  It was super hot, dry, dusty and dirty.
Buguruni Market


We conducted 7 household and 3 stakeholder interviews in Buguruni.  During these interviews, Anna conducted the interview in Kiswahili and I managed all the media equipment while answering the occasional clarification question from Anna.  This has been a really fun job for me, even while feeling like crap, because it has allowed me to tap that wanna-be photojournalist spirit inside of me while getting to quietly observe how people live in this community, what kinds of things they have in their houses, and what do for their water and sanitation needs.  I am averaging about 200 still photos a day and video clips of women fetching water all while practicing two skills that do not at all come naturally to me, being patient and being quiet.  ; )


Some general observations from Buguruni slum:


  • Most households get their water from taps which can be sourced by properly dug government wells or private companies who do not take care in surveying their potential well sites to make sure they are not in danger of mixing with raw sewage.
  • All households store their water in 5-Liter plastic buckets with lids and they stack 15 or so of these containers by the door.
  • All household have pit latrines and they are often shared by 10-20 other people. There is no formal sanitation system and private companies empty the pits and dump it in an area of the slum close to houses and it regularly mixes with the water lines.
  • People prefer more traditional looking designs of water filters than the ones PATH developed for SE Asia (no big surprises there!).
Household Interview


Water tap and storage containers


Product feedback on water filters
Typical pit latrine


After completing the interviews in Dar, Anna and I headed for Gieta.  Gieta is in Mwanza province on Lake Victoria and it much cooler, not as dusty, and a small red dirt mining town.  To get here we flew on a 1.5 hour flight, took a 2.5 hour drive, and a 30 ferry ride across Lake Victoria.  We will be here for the next 5 nights.


Working in Buguruni was certainly interesting albeit a bit heartbreaking as always.  The kids were adorable and willing subjects for my amateur photography.  Am happy to report I am feeling much better physically heading into week too and am excited about the differences we will see in this community.






Much love,


Liz

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Tanzania

Mambo friend and family!!


Welcome to my new blog site!  I finally started one.  ; )  I am sure this will significantly reduce the burden of large attached photos cluttering your inbox as you read about my travels!  Blogging is a new project for me and I am just now trying my hand at it. Thanks for your patience as I have finally come out of the dark ages of emailing travel updates and join the rest of the blogging world.


Right, so here we go....I am in Tanzania and it is my first visit to this country.  Tanzania, located in East Africa is the southern neighbor of beloved Kenya.  The are many things to love about Tanzania, it is warm and sunny, right on the Indian Ocean and is home to more wildlife areas than any other place on the Earth.  Some of the parks include the famed Serengeti, Ngorongoro Crater, Tanangire, and the Selous Game reserve.  And then there is the Zanzibar archipelago!  


I arrived this past Thursday after a 29-hour journey from Seattle which included 4 flights, 5 airports, and 9 hours of layover time (not the most direct route).  It was grueling to say the least....but I am finally here!  My last flight over, on Thursday morning, was from Nairobi to Dar es Salaam and we literally flew right over Mount Kilimanjaro....freaking amazing.  Kilimanjaro is the highest peak on the African Continent sitting almost 20,000 feet above sea level.  The top is a flat plateau and snow-covered.  Fortunately, I was sitting in the 'F' position set on the airplane for optimum mountain viewing but unfortunately, my camera was safely stowed away in the overhead bin and getting it would of required me climbing over 2 large Tanzanian men.  I will not make this rookie mistake on the way back.  


I am here to conduct the Tanzania arm of a 3-country qualitative assessment to determine preferences of African households for water and sanitation interventions.  The other two arms are in Mali and Ethiopia.  The three assessments are being led by three different PATH researchers; Mali (Siri), Ethiopia (Jennifer), and Tanzania (me!).  The Mali assessment wrapped up last week, Tanzania is launching on Monday, and Ethiopia, not far behind, will launch on Wednesday.  


As some of you know, PATH got into water work 5-years ago when we were awarded a 25-million dollar grant form the GATES Foundation.  For the last 5 years we have been doing extensive research in India and Southeast Asia but are now interested in expanding our WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene) portfolio into Africa.  One of the nice things about working at PATH is the organization values background, formative research before expanding into new areas.  So, this is what we are hoping to accomplish through this assessment.  We are aiming to learn more about what households are currently doing in these three countries for water storage, treatment, and sanitation management in order to get an idea of a direction for a strategy to hopefully intervene in a positive way.


In all three countries we are conducting this qualitative assessment by visiting households and stakeholders in rural and urban areas and conducting 2-3 hour in-depth interviews with a small sample in order to determine 'anything and everything' related to what households are currently doing with water and sanitation.  This includes conducting a semi-structured interview with the lady of the household, following them to their water source to collect water (while videoing), coming back to the house and observing water storage and treatment practices, observing hand washing facilities, and the household latrine (yay!).  In addition we are hoping to get feedback on our PATH water filters to determine their appropriateness for the African context.  They were developed for and intended for the SE Asian market and our hunch is they will need to look a little more 'Africa- appropriate' (imagine clay pot) to work well here.  We shall see.




Since arriving I have been arranging logistics, hiring a local research consultant, ensuring we have Tanzanian ethical approval for our study, and anything else that needs to be done to start piloting our interview guides tomorrow.  


The Tanzanian arm of the study will be conducted in 2-places within the country, Dar es Salaam (urban) and Mwanza (rural).   This first week will be spent conducting interviews in Dar and then
myself and Anna (research consultant) will travel Mwanza on the shore of Lake Victoria.


I am really excited about this research.  It is exploratory, ethnographic research, which is a type of research that I do not have much experience in but was very interested in learning more about. 


In other news, Stevan is coming out at the end of the research period and on March 3rd we start an 8-night vacation here in Tanzania.  We are currently planning a mini-safari as well as a substantial beach vaca in Zanzibar!!


I plan on posting more frequently, with shorter posts so check back often if you like.  Hope everyone is well.  


Love,


Liz