RecruitingACTRN12618000633280

Revitalising Informal Settlements and their Environments (RISE): Assessing health, social, and environmental outcomes following water-sensitive revitalisation of informal settlements in Indonesia and Fiji

Revitalising Informal Settlements and their Environments (RISE): A parallel-cluster randomised controlled trial of assessing health, social, and environmental outcomes following water-sensitive revitalisation of informal settlements in Indonesia and Fiji


Sponsor

Monash University

Enrollment

9,000 participants

Start Date

Nov 1, 2018

Study Type

Interventional

Conditions

Summary

Urbanisation is a major demographic trend globally. Informal settlements account for much urban growth, exacerbating the inextricably linked challenges of sanitation, water provision, and public health. The conventional ‘big pipes’ solution to these challenges has changed little in 150 years, comes at major financial, environmental, and social costs, and frequently overlooks informal settlements. We have pioneered an alternative, water-sensitive approach that integrates sustainable design with the management of the water-cycle, benefiting human health and urban ecosystems. This decentralised, climate-change sensitive approach provides financial flexibility for multistage developments and adaptability to future technologies. It promises a solution to the water services challenges of informal settlements, yet has only been demonstrated in developed world settings. We will examine whether the water-sensitive approach can be applied to revitalise developing-world informal settlements to improve environmental and public health outcomes. Our evidence-based assessment of its efficacy across 24 settlements, poorly served by water infrastructure in Makassar and Suva, will deliver the first public health and environmental data on the benefits and risks of water-sensitive approaches.


Eligibility

Sex: Both males and females

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is exploring a smarter, more sustainable way to bring clean water and sanitation to informal urban settlements — the crowded, under-resourced neighbourhoods that spring up in fast-growing cities. Researchers from Monash University are testing a "water-sensitive" design approach in 24 settlements across Makassar, Indonesia, and Suva, Fiji. Instead of the old-school approach of laying big central pipes (which is expensive and often skips over informal areas entirely), this method uses decentralised, nature-inspired systems that manage water locally and work with the environment rather than against it. The study will track health, social, and environmental outcomes over five years to see whether these alternative water systems genuinely improve the lives of people living in these communities. Researchers want to know if fewer people get sick, if the environment improves, and if residents feel better about their neighbourhoods. To be eligible, participants must live in one of the enrolled settlements in Makassar or Suva, and the community as a whole must have agreed to be part of the project. This is a community-level study, meaning the intervention happens at the settlement level rather than to individual people.

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Interventions

Twenty-four informal settlements have been randomised to participate in the trial (12 located in Makassar, Indonesia; 12 located in Suva, Fiji). Twelve settlements will be intervention sites while the

Twenty-four informal settlements have been randomised to participate in the trial (12 located in Makassar, Indonesia; 12 located in Suva, Fiji). Twelve settlements will be intervention sites while the remaining sites will be control sites. Intervention and control sites will be equally distributed between the two main study locations. Prior to the start of the trial, a baseline survey will be conducted to collect baseline demographics and health data in all settlements. The intervention arm will involve delivery and construction of water-sensitive revitalisation infrastructure. These interventions will be site-specific but may include the installation of latrines and septic tanks, use of subsurface wetlands for sewage treatment, use of biofilters, building-scale rainwater harvesting, and installing street-scale drainage and storm water treatment facilities; improving roads and access; and connection to municipal sewer systems. Design and architectural teams from Monash University will personalize all infrastructure to each settlement site. Government bodies at each site (City Government of Makassar in Indonesia and Department of Housing, under the Ministry of Local Government, Housing and the Environment in Fiji) will be kept informed of all aspects of construction and monitoring. The original study protocol was for the first two years of the study will consist of protocol and intervention design, site selection, community and individual enrolment, community engagement, and community co-design of intervention. Construction at intervention sites was planned to commence towards the end of the third year of the study and was to be completed by the end of year 4; leaving a monitoring period post-construction of 2 years (for a total study length of 5 years). However, the study was delayed by over 2 years due to the COVID-19 pandemic and has also had additional building delays so will take approximately 9 years to complete. After the trial concludes, the twelve control settlements will receive the above water-sensitive infrastructure. All settlement sites will receive information about the rationale of the project and its focus on water and sanitation management. Once enrolled, and for the full duration of the trial, all communities will be visited by field workers at least every 6 months (this includes before and during the build of the intervention as well as after the installation of the intervention is completed). At that time, a range of health and wellbeing data will be collected using questionnaires. Field workers will collect fecal samples from children under 5 every 3 to 6 months and blood samples from children under 5 every 6 to 12 months. Participant recruitment is ongoing as enrolment is offered to all new residents coming into the RISE settlements. Final enrolment will cease at the end of the project. The changes to sampling frequency occurred after COVID lockdowns (2020/2021) which incurred significant project delays, necessitating protocol changes. At the start of 2022, when these changes were made, RISE had recruited 7741 participants.


Locations(2)

Makassar, Indonesia, Indonesia

Suva, Viti Levu, Fiji, Fiji

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ACTRN12618000633280