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Pendekatan One Health Dalam Peningkatan Akses Dan Kualitas Air Bersih Di Gereja Advent Kampung Bibiosi, Kabupaten Keerom Assa, Inriyanti; Rumbiak, Helmin; Rupilu, Vrensca; Asmuruf, Frans; Dian Burdames, Galio Rudolf
The Community Engagement Journal Vol 8 No 2 (2025)
Publisher : UNIVERSITAS CENDERAWASIH

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.52062/thecommen.v8i2.5100

Abstract

The main purpose of this activity to improve access and quality of clean water for the community around the Bibiosi Village Adventist Church, Keerom Regency, through the implementation of a One Health approach that integrates human, environmental, and social health aspects. Bibiosi Village faces serious problems related to limited clean water sources. Most residents still rely on river water and open wells that have high levels of turbidity and are contaminated with pathogenic microorganisms, especially Escherichia coli. This condition causes a high incidence of air-borne diseases such as diarrhea, skin infections, and digestive disorders. Low levels of clean and healthy living behavior (PHBS), limited infrastructure, and the habit of defecating in the open exacerbate the situation. This community service program uses a participatory approach by involving church congregation members, community leaders, housewives, church youth, and local health workers. The implementation of the activity is divided into four main stages, namely (1) socialization, (2) drilling and making wells, (3) installing air installations, and (4) implementing Reverse Osmosis (RO)-based water treatment technology. From a One Health perspective, this activity emphasizes the importance of the relationship between human, environmental, and animal health. Protection of air sources and waste management are part of an integrated health system. Keywords: health, people, environment, social
Wash Fit As A Complementary Tool For Industrial Hygiene In Primary Health Care Facilities: Case Study Reza Jonatan; Galio RD Burdames; Ilmidin Ilmidin; Reza Hendrawan
Jurnal Ners Vol. 10 No. 1 (2026): JANUARI 2026
Publisher : Universitas Pahlawan Tuanku Tambusai

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31004/jn.v10i1.52065

Abstract

Reliable water, sanitation, hygiene and waste services in health-care facilities (HCFs) are foundational to quality of care, infection prevention and control (IPC), and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs 3 and 6). In Jayapura, Papua Province, gaps in water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH), waste management in primary health centers (PHCs) compromise infection control, occupational safety, and quality of care. The WASH Facility Improvement Tool (WASH FIT), developed by WHO/UNICEF, offers a structured, risk-based approach to assess and improve these conditions. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of WASH FIT and promote the tool to mainstream WASH in the industrial hygiene context to improve health, safety, and environmental standards. An assessment using WASH FIT as a tool was conducted across 10 PHCs in Papua, combining scoring of key indicators (water, sanitation, hygiene, energy, waste, management) with structured observations, and technical documentation. WASH FIT assessment revealed significant shortcomings in key WASH indicators. Average scores were moderate to low: sanitation 55%, hygiene 66%, waste management 58%, and less than 60% had functional medical waste management systems. WASH FIT has proven to be an effective framework to improve occupational health standards in PHCs. Integrating WASH within an industrial hygiene lens offers a pathway to resilient systems in the broader context.