African Structural Engineering

Advancing Scholarship Across the Continent

Vol. 1 No. 1 (2000)

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Randomised Field Trial Methodology for Evaluating Adoption Rates in Kenyan Water Treatment Systems

Amina Hassan, University of Nairobi Kamau Ochieng, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) Wanjiku Mwangi, University of Nairobi
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18969500
Published: February 14, 2000

Abstract

{ "background": "Evaluating the real-world adoption of engineered water treatment systems in resource-limited settings remains methodologically challenging. Prevailing approaches often rely on self-reported data or short-term surveys, which can overestimate sustained use and provide limited causal insight into factors influencing adoption.", "purpose and objectives": "This article presents a robust methodological framework for conducting randomised field trials to measure longitudinal adoption rates of household water treatment technologies. The objective is to provide a replicable protocol for generating high-quality evidence on technology uptake and its determinants.", "methodology": "The methodology centres on a cluster-randomised controlled trial design. Communities are randomised to receive different intervention packages or support models. Adoption is measured via unannounced direct observation and sensor-based monitoring over a 12-month period. The primary analysis employs a multilevel logistic regression model: $\\logit(p{ij}) = \\beta0 + \\beta1 T{ij} + X{ij}\\gamma + uj$, where $p{ij}$ is the probability of correct use for household $i$ in cluster $j$, $T{ij}$ is the treatment assignment, $X{ij}$ a vector of covariates, and $uj$ a cluster random effect. Robust standard errors are used for inference.", "findings": "As a methodology article, this paper presents no empirical results from a specific trial. However, the proposed framework is designed to detect a minimum detectable effect of a 15-percentage-point difference in correct use between trial arms with 80% power, accounting for an intra-cluster correlation coefficient of 0.05.", "conclusion": "The outlined methodology provides a rigorous, engineering-focused approach to quantifying adoption, moving beyond simplistic binary metrics to assess correct, sustained use of water treatment systems.", "recommendations": "Researchers should integrate objective monitoring technologies with household surveys and allocate sufficient follow-up duration to capture seasonal variations in use. Pilot studies are recommended to refine measurement tools and estimate key parameters for sample size calculations.", "key words":

How to Cite

Amina Hassan, Kamau Ochieng, Wanjiku Mwangi (2000). Randomised Field Trial Methodology for Evaluating Adoption Rates in Kenyan Water Treatment Systems. African Structural Engineering, Vol. 1 No. 1 (2000). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18969500

Keywords

Randomised controlled trialField trial methodologyTechnology adoptionWater treatment systemsSub-Saharan Africa

References