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Definition & calculation of beneficiaries - how many people have been reached within a certain period of time?
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- csk
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- I work on the toilet, sanitation, biogas, FSM, environmental science and engineering, and I hope to contribute to the toilet revolution in China and in the global. I am happy to share Chinese WASH story.
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Re: Definition & calculation of beneficiaries
Dear Simon,
I am also wondering how these numbers come out in other countries. And I am also looking forward to answers from other SusanA members.
I am from China and I know the scenario in China more or less. For instance, in "WHO, UNICEF, 2017. Progress on drinking water, sanitation and hygiene: 2017 update and Sustainable Development Goal baselines" it shows at least 75% of improved sanitation in China by 2015 nationwide. this figure is from the official statistical yearbook of National Health and Family Planning Commission.
75% is an accumulative figure, based on the improvement of latrine in rural China since the 1960s. The result is based on census, every department reported to the competent department at the next higher level. It should be objective. However, I heard that there is an overlapping calculation. For instance, the toilet of one household may be retrofitted 3 times in a period. so it can be calculated by 3 rather than 1. I don't know how often. The fact is China really makes great progress to promote sanitation. I did many field study on the toilet, I can see the improvement.
As it is officially published, so every people use this figure.
Kind regards
Shikun CHENG
I am also wondering how these numbers come out in other countries. And I am also looking forward to answers from other SusanA members.
I am from China and I know the scenario in China more or less. For instance, in "WHO, UNICEF, 2017. Progress on drinking water, sanitation and hygiene: 2017 update and Sustainable Development Goal baselines" it shows at least 75% of improved sanitation in China by 2015 nationwide. this figure is from the official statistical yearbook of National Health and Family Planning Commission.
75% is an accumulative figure, based on the improvement of latrine in rural China since the 1960s. The result is based on census, every department reported to the competent department at the next higher level. It should be objective. However, I heard that there is an overlapping calculation. For instance, the toilet of one household may be retrofitted 3 times in a period. so it can be calculated by 3 rather than 1. I don't know how often. The fact is China really makes great progress to promote sanitation. I did many field study on the toilet, I can see the improvement.
As it is officially published, so every people use this figure.
Kind regards
Shikun CHENG
Shikun Cheng,
Associate professor, Ph.D
Center for Sustainable Environmental Sanitation (CSES)
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering
University of Science and Technology Beijing (USTB)
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Associate professor, Ph.D
Center for Sustainable Environmental Sanitation (CSES)
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering
University of Science and Technology Beijing (USTB)
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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You need to login to reply- Elisabeth
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Re: Definition & calculation of beneficiaries
Dear Simon,
Yes, good question! Probably every organisation has their own system of doing this, e.g. because they need to report something back to the donors. How is it done within the organisation that you work for? Can you give us an example?
We have the same problem with SuSanA and the Discussion Forum. We can track the number of posts per month (forum.susana.org/forum/statistics) but how do we know how many people have read the pages and then acted upon the information that they found? How many lives this has impacted? We use PIWIK (instead of Google Analytics) to monitor view rates of our website but still these figures are hard to interprete.
I give you another example: How many people are reached by campaigns surrounding World Toilet Day each November? There is a section on "impacts" in the Wikipedia article on World Toilet Day (I added that). It says:
One would have to check that reference to see how exactly they arrived at 750 million people. From memory I think it was based on some assumptions related to how many people read tweets or alike.
Hope this helps to get the discussion going. I would be interested to hear more about this.
Regards,
Elisabeth
Yes, good question! Probably every organisation has their own system of doing this, e.g. because they need to report something back to the donors. How is it done within the organisation that you work for? Can you give us an example?
We have the same problem with SuSanA and the Discussion Forum. We can track the number of posts per month (forum.susana.org/forum/statistics) but how do we know how many people have read the pages and then acted upon the information that they found? How many lives this has impacted? We use PIWIK (instead of Google Analytics) to monitor view rates of our website but still these figures are hard to interprete.
I give you another example: How many people are reached by campaigns surrounding World Toilet Day each November? There is a section on "impacts" in the Wikipedia article on World Toilet Day (I added that). It says:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Toilet_Day#ImpactsImpacts
In 2016, the World Toilet Day campaign and related publications reached millions of people through social media, dedicated websites and other channels.[34]:21 Over 100 events in 40 countries were registered on the World Toilet Day website in both 2016 and in 2017.[34]:23[35]:17 The UN-Water Annual Report states that in 2017 the hashtag #WorldToiletDay had a maximum potential reach of around 750 million people on social media.[35]:17
One would have to check that reference to see how exactly they arrived at 750 million people. From memory I think it was based on some assumptions related to how many people read tweets or alike.
Hope this helps to get the discussion going. I would be interested to hear more about this.
Regards,
Elisabeth
Dr. Elisabeth von Muench
Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
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Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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You need to login to reply- SimonG
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Definition & calculation of beneficiaries
Dear SuSanA community,
During research, I often stumble upon these beautiful numbers presented by large organisations about how many people they have reached within a certain period of time. I was wondering if anybody has experience or knowledge of how to define beneficiaries and how to calculate them. I am looking for a reference document from Unicef, WaterAid, etc. that clearly outlines how these organisations quantify their impact.
When it comes to building latrines e.g. in schools or households defining direct beneficiaries is rather easy. However, when it comes to the construction of sanitary facilities in public institutions, conducting capacity development or advocacy measures (training of teaching staff or other knowledge multipliers), a clear and reasonable structure of how to calculate beneficiaries is needed (direct as well as indirect beneficiaries).
Any additional input will be highly appreciated. Feel free to share relevant Documents.
Thanks in advance & best regards,
Simon
During research, I often stumble upon these beautiful numbers presented by large organisations about how many people they have reached within a certain period of time. I was wondering if anybody has experience or knowledge of how to define beneficiaries and how to calculate them. I am looking for a reference document from Unicef, WaterAid, etc. that clearly outlines how these organisations quantify their impact.
When it comes to building latrines e.g. in schools or households defining direct beneficiaries is rather easy. However, when it comes to the construction of sanitary facilities in public institutions, conducting capacity development or advocacy measures (training of teaching staff or other knowledge multipliers), a clear and reasonable structure of how to calculate beneficiaries is needed (direct as well as indirect beneficiaries).
Any additional input will be highly appreciated. Feel free to share relevant Documents.
Thanks in advance & best regards,
Simon
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