Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review

This study explicates the scope of published literature on the influence of attitudes and perceptions on the intention to use human excreta and human excreta derived materials in agriculture. Using a scoping review methodology, search results from Scopus and Web of Science were screened and synthesi...

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Main Authors: Simon Gwara, Edilegnaw Wale, Alfred Odindo, Chris Buckley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/11/2/153
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spelling doaj-0d4e418a5dcf40d98b35acf8d592e9a42021-04-02T18:36:07ZengMDPI AGAgriculture2077-04722021-02-011115315310.3390/agriculture11020153Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping ReviewSimon Gwara0Edilegnaw Wale1Alfred Odindo2Chris Buckley3Discipline of Agricultural Economics, School of Agricultural, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 3201, South AfricaDepartment of Agricultural Economics, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein 9300, South AfricaDiscipline of Crop Science, School of Agricultural, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 3201, South AfricaDiscipline of Chemical Engineering, Pollution Research Group, School of Engineering, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 4001, South AfricaThis study explicates the scope of published literature on the influence of attitudes and perceptions on the intention to use human excreta and human excreta derived materials in agriculture. Using a scoping review methodology, search results from Scopus and Web of Science were screened and synthesized using the DistillerSR web-based application. Out of the 1192 studies identified, 22 published articles met the inclusion criteria. Additional studies were identified by keyword enrichment, hand-searching, and snowballing in other electronic data bases. The benefit perception of the soil health, income, and yield was the main driver for positive attitudes. Perceived health risk and socio-cultural factors were reported as the main barriers to the use of human excreta derived materials in agriculture. Limited information, availability, collection, transport, and storage were the other reported perceived barriers. The influence of socioeconomic and demographic factors on farmers’ attitudes and perceptions was inconclusive, which is potentially attributed to contextual and methodological differences. Social and behavior change communication through community mass campaigns and targeting interventions segregated by socioeconomic and demographic contexts is recommended for development interventions. Future empirical studies could focus on the influence of crop types, treatment processes, food preparation and processing on attitudes and perceptions.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/11/2/153recovery and reusehuman excretaattitude and perceptionrisk perceptionbenefit perceptionhealth risk
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simon Gwara
Edilegnaw Wale
Alfred Odindo
Chris Buckley
spellingShingle Simon Gwara
Edilegnaw Wale
Alfred Odindo
Chris Buckley
Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review
Agriculture
recovery and reuse
human excreta
attitude and perception
risk perception
benefit perception
health risk
author_facet Simon Gwara
Edilegnaw Wale
Alfred Odindo
Chris Buckley
author_sort Simon Gwara
title Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review
title_short Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review
title_full Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review
title_fullStr Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes and Perceptions on the Agricultural Use of Human Excreta and Human Excreta Derived Materials: A Scoping Review
title_sort attitudes and perceptions on the agricultural use of human excreta and human excreta derived materials: a scoping review
publisher MDPI AG
series Agriculture
issn 2077-0472
publishDate 2021-02-01
description This study explicates the scope of published literature on the influence of attitudes and perceptions on the intention to use human excreta and human excreta derived materials in agriculture. Using a scoping review methodology, search results from Scopus and Web of Science were screened and synthesized using the DistillerSR web-based application. Out of the 1192 studies identified, 22 published articles met the inclusion criteria. Additional studies were identified by keyword enrichment, hand-searching, and snowballing in other electronic data bases. The benefit perception of the soil health, income, and yield was the main driver for positive attitudes. Perceived health risk and socio-cultural factors were reported as the main barriers to the use of human excreta derived materials in agriculture. Limited information, availability, collection, transport, and storage were the other reported perceived barriers. The influence of socioeconomic and demographic factors on farmers’ attitudes and perceptions was inconclusive, which is potentially attributed to contextual and methodological differences. Social and behavior change communication through community mass campaigns and targeting interventions segregated by socioeconomic and demographic contexts is recommended for development interventions. Future empirical studies could focus on the influence of crop types, treatment processes, food preparation and processing on attitudes and perceptions.
topic recovery and reuse
human excreta
attitude and perception
risk perception
benefit perception
health risk
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/11/2/153
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