The Hindu 22.09.2014
More men among toilet-sceptics in India
Extensive new evidence shows that building toilets alone
will not eliminate open defecation in India as not everyone who has
access to toilet, especially men, believe that it’s important to use it.
Not
having a toilet remains the major problem in sanitation: 60 per cent of
rural households and just under 10 per cent of urban households in
India do not have access to a toilet, according to new official data
from the 68th round of the National Sample Survey (NSS) data. But even
among households with access to toilets, some open defecation exists.
According to NSS data, two per cent of rural households with access to
toilets do not use them. However, researchers Diane Coffey, Aashish
Gupta et al of the Research Institute for Compassionate Economics (RICE)
found that 7 per cent of households with access to a toilet were not
using them. When they looked at households where at least one family
member was not using the toilet, the number swelled to 18 per cent.
This number is being driven up by men, who, in all three surveys, reported lower toilet use than women.
“I
built the toilet for my youngest daughter-in-law not to feel shame. But
I go to the fields – it’s much healthier going there,” Ramavatar, a
marginal farmer in Uttar Pradesh’s Fatehpur district, told
The Hindu
earlier this summer. Such “personal preference” is overwhelmingly the
most common reason for not using toilets despite access seen in both NSS
and RICE data.