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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
2020 pubmed 10 citations

Strategies to Connect Low-Income Communities with the Proposed Sewerage Network of the Dhaka Sanitation Improvement Project, Bangladesh: A Qualitative Assessment of the Perspectives of Stakeholders.

Alam. Mahbub-Ul MU; Sharior. Fazle F; Ferdous. Sharika S; Ahsan. Atik A; Ahmed. Tanvir T; Afrin. Ayesha A; Sarker. Supta S; Akand. Farhana F; Archie. Rownak Jahan RJ; Hasan. Kamrul K; Renouf. Rosie R; Drabble. Sam S; Norman. Guy G; Rahman. Mahbubur M; Tidwell. James B JB

Key Findings

  • Low‑income communities need upgraded toilet infrastructure and road access to join the sewer network.
  • Communal septic tanks may be required where individual connections are not feasible.
  • Income‑based or area‑based subsidies and monthly fee collection were suggested to finance connection and maintenance.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers and longevity enthusiasts, this research offers no actionable health or performance protocols. The findings are relevant only to urban sanitation planning, not to personal health optimization.

Summary

The study looks at how to connect low‑income neighborhoods in Dhaka to a new sewer system. It talks about building better toilets, communal septic tanks, subsidies, and fee collection, but it does not provide any information that can be used for health‑optimizing practices or biohacking.

Abstract

In Bangladesh, approximately 31% of urban residents are living without safely managed sanitation, the majority of whom are slum residents. To improve the situation, Dhaka Water Supply and Sewerage Authority (DWASA) is implementing the Dhaka Sanitation Improvement Project (DSIP), mostly funded by the World Bank. This study assessed the challenges and opportunities of bringing low-income communities (LICs) under a sewerage connection within the proposed sewerage network plan by 2025. We conducted nine key-informant interviews from DWASA and City Corporation, and 23 focus-group discussions with landlords, tenants, and Community Based Organisations (CBOs) from 16 LICs near the proposed catchment area. To achieve connections, LICs would require improved toilet infrastructures and have to be connected to main roads. Construction of large communal septic tanks is also required where individual toilet connections are difficult. To encourage connection in LICs, income-based or area-based subsidies were recommended. For financing maintenance, respondents suggested monthly fee collection for management of the infrastructure by dividing bills equally among sharing households, or by users per household. Participants also suggested the government's cooperation with development-partners/NGOs to ensure sewerage connection construction, operation, and maintenance and prerequisite policy changes such as assuring land tenure.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-10-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ijerph17197201

Citations

10

References

64