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Cash-based interventions are increasingly used in humanitarian response, including in the water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) sect
Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) interventions provide dignity and prevent disease transmission.
Locally-manufactured ceramic water filters (CWFs) remove Escherichia coli via physical screening, physicochemical mechanism
The Zimbabwean government and a number of organisations responded in various ways to the devastation done by Cyclone Idai, which occ
Monitoring water, sanitation, and hygiene programs in cholera outbreaks is critical to improve humanitarian response.
In 2020, the WASH team in UNICEF Lebanon issued a nationwide feasibility and monitoring study for the use of cash as a modality to m
This document has been prepared to share the 10-year experience, from 2010 to 2020, that UNICEF staff and their partners have accumu
Water trucking is a commonly implemented, but severely under-researched, drinking water supply intervention in humanitarian response
Despite documented health benefits of household water treatment and storage (HWTS), achieving sustained use remains challenging.
Internally displaced persons (IDPs) are often predisposed to infectious diseases because of the temporary nature of their abode whic