PUBLICATIONS

Publications can be assessed  on these links:

Annual Reports
Articles 
Text Books
Conference papers
Dissertations
Manuals 
Peer reviewed Papers
Posters
Videos

All Documentation on Community Health Clubs

 

  1. Africa AHEAD  (2014) Cholera Mitigation through Community Health Clubs, Manicaland Province, Zimbabwe. Grant No AID- 613-G-12-00001. USAID Report.
  2. Assurduy, L et al. (2007) Assessment of the community Health Club Approach: Koinadugu District Sierra Leone. Care International
  3. Brooks, J., Adams, A., Bendjemil, S., & Rosenfeld, J. (2015) Putting heads and hands together to change knowledge and behaviors: Community Health Clubs in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.  Presentation.
  4. CBEHPP: Registry of Community Health Clubs. www.chcahead.com
  5. Chingono, A.M. (2013)  An investigation on the impact of the Community Health Clubs Approach on Community Health– Case of Ward 19 in Mberengwa District. Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Post Graduate Diploma in Water Supplies and Sanitation. Institute of Water and Sanitation. Zimbabwe.
  6. Deffner, J. (2013). Participatory implementation of sanitation infrastructure in urban areas of north-central Namibia. WHOCC Newsletter. July 2013. 1-6.
  7. Ekane. N.  (2014) Community-based Sanitation Programs in Rwanda. Presentation. Africa AHEAD/Stockholm Environment Institute Side Event. World Water Week, Stockholm
  8. Maksimsovski, N & Waterkeyn, A. (2010) The Community Health Club Approach in Informal Settlements: Case study from eThekwini municipality, Kwa Zulu Natal, South Africa. Water Institute of South Africa, Durban. South Africa.
  9. Mathew. B. &  Mukuwe.R. (1999) Health Clubs- Hygiene Education in Bikita IRWSSP. WEDC. Water Engineering & Development Centre Conference. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
  10. Matimati, R.   (2012)   Classic CHC:  The Zimbabwe Experience. Africa  AHEAD Side Event. Water and Health Conference University of North Carolina.
  11. Matimati, R. (2017) Perceptions towards Water, Sanitation and Hygiene among Communities in Chipinge district, Zimbabwe.  A research project submitted for the Master of Public Health Programme Department of Life Sciences University of Roehampton London
  12. Ministry of Health / UNICEF (2012) Gahunda y’abaturage yo Guteza Imbere Ubukikije.Inyoborabiganiro yagenewe abazahugura kelebe z’isuku n’abajyanama b’ubuzima: Manual for Community Health Club facilitators. Rwanda.
  13. Ministry of Health (2010) Roadmap for Community Based Environmental Health Promotion Programme (CBEHPP) Rwanda.
  14. Nash. L. (2014) Sharing the power of Community Health Clubs. Africa AHEAD/Stockholm Environment Institute Side Event. World Water Week, Stockholm. You Tube Video
  15. Ntakarutimana A, Ekane N. (2017) Performance of community health clubs in transforming sanitation and hygiene conditions  https://wedcknowledge.lboro.ac.uk/resources/conference/40/Ntakarutimana-2798.pdf.
  16. Pantoglou, J. (2018) Evaluating Hygiene Behaviour Change Within Community Health Clubs in the Rusizi District of Rwanda. Master’s thesis submitted to the Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin in  partial fulfilment of the requirements  of a Master of Science degree in International Health
  17. Rosenfeld, J.   (2010) Incremental Improvements to Community Water Supply Systems through Community Health Clubs in the Umzimkhulu Local Municipality.  International Water Association.  Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
  18. Rosenfeld. J. (2012)   CHCs in the  Dominican Republic. Africa  AHEAD Side Event. Water and Health Conference University of North Carolina.
  19. Rosenfeld. J. (2016) Building Common-Unity one Club at a Time. TED Video
  20. Rosenfeld, J. (2019). Social capital and community health clubs in Haiti(Order No. 13903577). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (2296700336).
  21. Rosenfeld J and Taylor, B. (2015) Global Health in the Dominican Republic: Progress and Obstacles to Scale Up and Implementation of Successful Programs. EDGS Working Paper. Number 35. University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio Center for Medical Humanities and Ethics.
  22. Rosenfeld J & Waterkeyn J.   (2009) Using Cell Phones to monitor and evaluate behaviour change through Community Health Clubs in South Africa.Water Engineering & Development Centre 
  23. Rosemarin. A.  & Ndahiro. A. (2014). Hygiene Behaviour Change through CBEHPP in RwandaAfrica AHEAD/Stockholm Environment Institute Side Event. World Water Week, Stockholm. YouTubeVideo
  24. Saywel. D.   (2012)  CLTS and CHC – Complementary or Contradictory? Africa  AHEAD Side Event. Water and Health Conference University of North Carolina. Presentation
  25. Sheela S, Schmidt W-P, Wendt R, Mfura L, Crossett E, Grépin K, Jack W, Rwabufigiri B, Habyarimana J, Clasen T. (2017). Effect of community health clubs on child diarrhoea in western Rwanda: cluster-randomised controlled trial. lancetgh Vol 5.2017. Sinharoy IPA paper
  26. Waterkeyn, A. and Waterkeyn J. (2002.) Final Project Report. Watershed. CARE. Sierra Leone.
  27. Waterkeyn, A. (2005)  Hygiene & Sanitation Strategies in Uganda: How to achieve sustainable behaviour change? 31st  Water Engineering & Development Centre Conference: Kampala. Uganda.
  28. Waterkeyn. A. (2014) Vision 5 x 5: Scaling up Community Health Clubs. Africa AHEAD/Stockholm Environment Institute Side Event. World Water Week, Stockholm.
  29. Waterkeyn. A. (2012) The Dissemination and Scale up of  CHCs. Africa  AHEAD Side Event. Water and Health Conference University of North Carolina. PresentationWaterkeyn. A. (2013)    CHCs sparking self supply  in Zimbabwe. Water and Health Conference. University of North Carolina. Presentation
  30. Waterkeyn, J.  (1999) Structured Participation in Community Health Clubs. Water Engineering & Development Centre Conference. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
  31. Waterkeyn, J. (2003) Cost Effective Health Promotion: Community Health Clubs. 29th Water Engineering & Development Centre Conference. Abuja, Nigeria.
  32. Waterkeyn, J. (2005) Decreasing Communicable Diseases Through Improved Hygiene in Community Health Clubs. 31st  Water Engineering & Development Centre Conference: Kampala.
  33. Waterkeyn, J. (2006) Cost Effective Health Promotion
    and Hygiene Behaviour Change through Community Health Clubs. PhD Thesis submitted to London Schoool of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
  34. Waterkeyn, J. (2006) District Health Promotion using the Consensus Approach. WELL / DFID / London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Manual
  35. Waterkeyn, J. (2010) Hygiene Behaviour Change through the Community Health Club Approach: a cost effective strategy to achieve the Millennium Developments Goals for Improved Sanitation in Africa. PhD Thesis published with Lambert Academic Publishing. Germany.  Full Thesis
  36. Waterkeyn, J.  (2012) Best Practice in Hygiene Promotion Programme:  an evaluation template for assessing cost-effectiveness. University of North Carolina – Water Institute
  37. Waterkeyn. J.   (2012) The Mechanics of Hygiene Behaviour Change. Africa  AHEAD Side Event. Water and Health Conference University of North Carolina.
  38. Waterkeyn, J. (2012) Best Practice in Health Promotion: comparing CHC & CLTS. Africa  AHEAD Side Event. Water and Health Conference University of North Carolina.
  39. Waterkeyn. J. (2013) Integration, Sustainability, Institutionalisation & Scale. Water and Health Conference. University of North Carolina.
  40. Waterkeyn. J. (2014)  I am not nothing now: how Community Health Clubs empower womenAfrica AHEAD/Stockholm Environment Institute Side Event. World Water Week, Stockholm. Presentation
  41. Waterkeyn. J.  (2015) A Practical Model to Achieve 8 x Sustainable Development Goals. Water and Health Conference. University of North Carolina
  42. Waterkeyn, J & Cairncross, S. (2005) Creating a demand for sanitation through Community Health Clubs:  a cost effective intervention in two districts of Zimbabwe. Journal of Social Science and Medicine. 61. p.1958-1970
  43. Waterkeyn J, Nyamandi VK and Nguyen NH. (2021)  A Comparative Study of the Efficacy of Community Health Clubs in Rural Areas of Vietnam and Zimbabwe to Control Diarrhoeal Disease. DOI: 10.5772/intechopen.97142
  44. Waterkeyn J & Waterkeyn. A.  (2000) Demand Led Sanitation in Zimbabwe. Water Engineering & Development Centre: Dhaka, Bangladesh.
  45. Waterkeyn J & Waterkeyn. A.  (2004) Taking PHAST the Extra Mile Through Community Health Clubs. Water Sanitation Programme – East Africa
  46. Waterkeyn, J. & Waterkeyn, A. (2013) Creating a culture of health: hygiene behaviour change in community health clubs through knowledge and positive peer pressure. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development  Vol 3 No 2. 144–155
  47. Waterkeyn, J., Waterkeyn, A., Uwingabire, F., Pantoglou, J., Ntakarutimana A., Mbirira M., Katabarwa J., Bigirimana Z., Cairncross S., Carter R. (2020). The value of monitoring data in a process evaluation of hygiene behaviour change in Community Health Clubs to explain findings from a cluster-randomised controlled trial in Rwanda. BMC Public Health 20, 98 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7991-7
  48. Waterkeyn, J,   Matimati. R and Muringaniza. A.  (2010) ZOD for all – Scaling up the Community Health Club Model to meet the MDGs for Sanitation in Rural and Urban areas : Case Studies from Zimbabwe and Uganda. International Water Association Conference. Mexico City.
  49. Waterkeyn J., Matimati R., Muringaniza A., Chingono A., Ntakarutimana A., Katabarwa J., Bigirimana Z., Pantoglou J., Waterkeyn A., Cairncross S. (2019). Comparative Assessment of Hygiene Behaviour Change and Cost-effectiveness of Community Health Clubs in Rwanda and Zimbabwe. IntechOpen. DOI: 10.5772/intechopen.89995         Download poster
  50. Waterkeyn J & Nga. N. (2011) Low cost-high Impact: Hygiene Behaviour Change in Vietnam in Community Health Clubs. University of North Carolina – Water Institute Conference
  51. Waterkeyn, J. Okot. P, Kwame.V.  (2005) Rapid Sanitation Uptake in the Internally Displaced People Camps of Northern Uganda through Community Health Clubs. 31st  Water Engineering & Development Centre Conference: Kampala. Uganda.
  52. Whaley, L and Webster, J. (2011) The effectiveness and sustainability of two demand driven sanitation and hygiene approaches in Zimbabwe. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development. 1.1.p.20-36