ITGH: Smart Sanitation
This project addresses the urgent challenge of poor sanitation which contributes to disease transmission, particularly in developing countries that are resource constrained. The solution utilizes data from sensors in public toilets, sewage and water systems, in combination with ecological and environmental changes from earth observation data to detect disease-causing pathogens in communities and disease outbreaks. The data is used to train AI models to predict potential outbreaks, equipping healthcare workers, policymakers, and community members with critical information necessary for developing and implementing mitigation strategies to fortify community health security. The system is connected to a centralized resource sharing platform to visualize, synthesize, and utilize data, helping to increase disease surveillance.
In South Africa, about 2.6 million households do not have access to safe drinking water and 400,000 households do not have a toilet facility. These circumstances lead to a significant proportion of young children and vulnerable individuals to die of preventable diseases - one in four children before age five and one in 10 before age 15. The high prevalence of these water and hygiene-related illnesses such as diarrhoea, cholera, intestinal worms and typhoid contribute to malnutrition and cognitive deficiencies, which erodes health and economic outcomes in communities, as the full potential of affected individuals are not realized. These are also fertile conditions for incubation of disease-causing pathogens which could lead to outbreaks.
Globally, approximately 3.8 trillion litres of waste are left untreated or lost and 892 million people in the world are still practicing open defecation (UNICEF/WHO JMP, 2017). In India alone, it is estimated that as a direct result of poor sanitation, about $54bn of GDP is lost annually as well as 200,000 human lives. These figures are not insignificant and improvements in these conditions could lead to improved outcomes for human life.
Pathogen detecting sensors are placed in public toilets, sewage systems, and water sources in pilot communities. Signals from the sensors are transmitted over local cellular networks and satellite communication channels to remote management systems. Earth observation data from two satellites provided by the European Space Agency assesses environmental and ecological changes including water chemistry, conditions at dumping sites, temperature changes, weather patterns, and water levels. These observations are used to model the impact of weather on water levels and how changes to these conditions might help disease propagate in communities. Basic edge-analysis change impacts are also conducted to understand how the topography affects the water flow and any associated potential for contamination.
The combination of data from sensors and Earth observation data from the satellites are used not only to identify the presence of disease-causing pathogens in water bodies in communities, but to also develop and train AI models that predict possible disease outbreaks based on those observations. The data and findings from the analyses are published to a centralized platform that is accessible to health practitioners, equipping them with the knowledge required to make rapid decisions aimed at controlling the spread of any disease outbreaks.
The eThekwini Municipal Area or Durban, South Africa is the site of the pilot and its residents will be the primary beneficiaries of this implementation. About one million people or 26 percent of the population currently live in informal settlements with poor sanitation conditions (eThekwini Municipality, 2019). There are about 2500 Community Ablution Blocks - shared sanitation and water facilities - and about 85,000 dry toilets or pit latrines. Most of the informal settlements do not have proper stormwater drainage systems and as a result, water collects on the surface with all the greywater that residents disposed of, using the bucket system when it rains.
Isolating the core issue of poor sanitation and designing possible solutions to address them came from substantial interactions with locals in the community, including researchers at the University of KwaZulu-Natal's School of Built Environment and Development Studies, who have conducted extensive research in the space. Clinical data provided evidence of the impact of preventable diseases on the local population as a result of poor sanitation. Economic data revealed the impact on individual productivity and household income. Taken together and with input from community members, it became clear that the issue of poor sanitation presented significant risk to the local population. Knowledge of the local context including cultural and behavioral characteristics, imparted by local groups also helped to inform the design of the solution.
By identifying the presence of disease-causing pathogens in the community and being able to predict possible outbreaks, we can equip policymakers and health practitioners with critical information needed to make rapid and informed decisions.
- Strengthen disease surveillance, early warning predictive systems, and other data systems to detect, slow, or halt future disease outbreaks.
Our solution utilizes technology-based solutions to strengthen disease surveillance and equip healthcare workers with information necessary to take actionable steps to strengthen health security and mitigate the spread of disease in underserved and "at-risk" populations.
Utilization of space technology and IoT to monitor ecological changes, pathogen detection, and in combination with data from community input helps with developing predictive systems to strengthen disease surveillance.
Parsing data for use by healthcare workers and policymakers to make rapid and informed decisions that can help mitigate disease prevalence and burden, equips healthcare workers with knowledge to develop effective actionable containment plans.
- Pilot: An organization deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community.
A feasibility study commissioned by the European Space Agency has been conducted and the first pilot in the eThekwini Municipality is scheduled to be implemented. This pilot stage will benefit residents of two informal settlements - Quarry Road and Thandanani, with approximately 1450 households. Following the pilot, we expect to rapidly scale up the solution, first throughout the broader municipality which has a population of approximately three million people and then the country of South Africa.

President

Director of Global Health and Population