African Molecular Biology (Core Life Science) | 26 January 2004
Solar-Powered Water Treatment Systems in Off-Grid Villages of Burkina Faso: Economic and Health Outcomes Assessment
P, o, u, l, o, u, D, o, s, s, o, u, ,, I, s, s, a, O, u, é, d, r, a, o, g, o
Abstract
Solar-powered water treatment systems are increasingly being implemented in off-grid villages of Burkina Faso to address the lack of access to safe drinking water. A mixed-method approach was employed, combining surveys with quantitative economic analysis and qualitative interviews to evaluate system performance and user satisfaction in selected villages. The preliminary findings indicate that solar-powered water treatment systems reduce the incidence of waterborne diseases by up to 30% among users compared to non-users, while maintaining a cost-effectiveness ratio below $5 per household per month. Despite initial challenges in implementation and maintenance, the study concludes that these systems offer significant health benefits at acceptable economic costs for off-grid villages in Burkina Faso. Communities should be involved in system design and operation to ensure sustainability. Further research is needed to refine cost models and explore community engagement strategies. Solar-Powered Water Treatment Systems, Off-Grid Villages, Health Outcomes, Economic Impact, Burkina Faso Treatment effect was estimated with $\text{logit}(p<em>i)=\beta</em>0+\beta^\top X_i$, and uncertainty reported using confidence-interval based inference.