posted on 2021-06-16, 22:03authored byDavid D. Meyer, Courtney Hill, Kelly McCain, James A. Smith, Pascal O. Bessong, Elizabeth T. Rogawski McQuade, Natasha C. Wright
Health benefits from point-of-use
(POU) water treatment devices
come only with consistent use. Embedded sensors can measure the consistency
of POU-device use and can provide insights about improving it. We
demonstrate both potentials with data from SmartSpouts: accelerometer-based
sensors embedded in spigot handles that record the duration and timing
of use. In the laboratory, most sensor readings correlated well (>0.98)
with manually timed water withdrawals. In the field, SmartSpouts measured
>60,000 water withdrawals across 232 households in Limpopo, South
Africa. Sensors proved critical to understanding consistent use; surveys
overestimated it by 53 percentage points. Sensor data showed when
households use POU devices (evening peaks and delayed weekend routines)
and user preferences (safe storage over filters). We demonstrate analytically
and with data that (i) consistent use (e.g., 7 continuous days) is
extremely sensitive to single-day use prevalence and (ii) use prevalence
affects the performance of contact-time-based POU devices, exemplified
with silver tablets. Deployed SmartSpouts had limitations, including
memory overflows and confounding device relocation with water withdrawal.
Nevertheless, SmartSpouts provided useful and objective data on the
prevalence of single-day and consistent use. Considerably less expensive
than alternatives, SmartSpouts enable an order of magnitude increase
in how many POU-device sensors can be deployed.