Indicator’s Wording
Indicator’s Purpose
How to Collect and Analyse the Required Data
1) Consult your WASH advisor and/or relevant WASH authorities on locally available methods for testing the presence of faecal coliforms.
2) Ensure that the water samples are collected from a representative sample of households + from water that the household members use for drinking.
3) To calculate the indicator's value, divide the number of households whose drinking water contains 0 fecal coliforms per 100 ml sample by the total number of assessed households. Multiply the result by 100 to convert it to a percentage.
Disaggregate by
Disaggregate the data by wealth and other relevant criteria.
Important Comments
1) Be aware that collecting and analysing water samples from a representative number of households is likely to be quite time-consuming and costly.
2) In acute emergencies it is often challenging to reach the standard of "no faecal coliforms per 100ml of water". Therefore, consult with the WASH cluster the possibility of changing your indicator to "... less than 10 faecal coliforms ...", reflecting the following thresholds described in UNHCR's Emergency Field Handbook:
> 0–10 faecal coliforms/100 ml = reasonable quality
> 10–100 faecal coliforms/100 ml = polluted
> 100–1,000 faecal coliforms/100 ml = dangerous
> 1,000 faecal coliforms/100 ml = very dangerous
3) BHA phrases the indicator slightly differently, as "percent of households whose drinking water supplies have 0 fecal coliforms per 100 ml sample".