Burkina Faso faces persistent public health challenges. Maternal mortality remains high by global standards, with recent estimates placing the maternal mortality ratio in the low hundreds per 100,000 live births (estimates vary by source and year). Access to safely managed drinking water and basic sanitation is uneven: urban areas have substantially better coverage than rural communities where many health facilities also lack reliable water and sanitation services. Maternal health and safe water are tightly linked — clean water, functioning sanitation and hygiene (WASH) in health facilities and communities directly reduce infection, improve birth outcomes, and enable safe newborn care.
Why corporate social responsibility (CSR) is relevant
Private sector actors operating in Burkina Faso — including mining, telecommunications, agribusiness and beverage companies — have incentives to invest in maternal health and water access. These incentives combine ethical commitments, reputational protection, workforce stability, and the need for a social license to operate. Well-designed CSR programs can complement government and donor efforts by filling service gaps, piloting scalable models, and leveraging private expertise in supply chains, engineering, logistics, and community engagement.
Typical forms of CSR initiatives
- WASH infrastructure: drilling new boreholes, fitting solar-driven pumps, establishing safeguarded wells, and constructing latrines both in communities and inside health centers and maternity units.
- Health facility upgrades: supplying water storage systems, handwashing points, dependable power for lighting and sterilization, and incinerators to manage medical waste.
- Human resources and training: funding midwife and nurse education, enabling ongoing professional development, and covering stipends for community health workers.
- Maternal health service support: underwriting ambulance or motorcycle transport networks for urgent obstetric referrals, providing delivery kits, and backing blood donation initiatives or storage options.
- Behavior change and community engagement: running awareness efforts on antenatal care, safe childbirth practices, newborn care, family planning, and gender-responsive health education.
- Market-based approaches: assisting small local businesses that deliver WASH goods, sanitary products, or low-cost water kiosks, often linked to microfinance services.
- Partnerships and financing: offering grants, co-funding with NGOs or local authorities, and creating multi-actor platforms for combined investment and shared risk.
Illustrations and pattern scenarios
- Mining-sector programs: mining companies routinely channel resources into regional infrastructure around their concessions, often blending borehole drilling, electrification for health facilities, and support for emergency transport to cut delays in accessing care. Reviews of comparable mining-driven CSR efforts in the Sahel region have documented clear rises in facility-based births when dependable water systems and transport options are in place.
- Telecom and utilities: telecom operators commonly back awareness initiatives and digital health tools, including SMS reminders for antenatal visits and hotline assistance, while utilities or engineering firms finance the repair of water points and the installation of solar-powered pumping solutions that maintain uninterrupted supplies for clinics.
- Beverage and bottling companies: beverage companies reliant on local water sources frequently invest in watershed conservation, community boreholes, and water purification kiosks, creating opportunities to integrate maternal and child health messaging at distribution points.
- NGO-corporate partnerships: international NGOs with expertise in WASH and reproductive health join forces with private donors to broaden the reach of interventions, combining community engagement and behavior-change capabilities with corporate funding and operational support.
Impact evidence and measurable outcomes
Robust CSR initiatives disclose performance based on well defined indicators. Common measures include:
- Maternal outcomes: the rate of skilled attendance at birth, the percentage of deliveries taking place in facilities, the time required for referrals during obstetric emergencies, and estimated maternal mortality ratios within the priority areas.
- WASH outcomes: the count of operational water points installed, the share of health facilities equipped with basic water services, the proportion of households benefiting from improved sanitation, and the occurrence of waterborne infections affecting mothers and newborns.
- Service use and equity: completion of antenatal care visits (four or more), levels of contraceptive adoption, and gains in service accessibility among the lowest-income quintiles and rural communities.
- Operational indicators: the volume of trained staff, the number of hours ambulances remain available, and the financial viability of established water kiosks or maintenance funds.
Publicly accessible evaluations in comparable settings indicate that pairing WASH enhancements in health facilities with community outreach efforts and transportation support often delivers the most substantial gains in facility-based births and lowers the incidence of infection-related complications.
Obstacles and potential hazards
- Maintenance and sustainability: infrastructure initiatives often falter when ongoing upkeep is not anchored within local institutions, and transferring responsibilities to underfunded health districts or community committees without reliable revenue channels can quickly lead to decline.
- Fragmentation: disconnected CSR interventions may replicate services within one area while others remain unsupported, making coordination with district health strategies vital.
- Equity and inclusion: CSR efforts may inadvertently prioritize easily reached communities or reinforce male‑dominated decision-making unless intentional steps promote women’s involvement and extend support to remote or marginalized populations.
- Security and operating environment: the security context in parts of Burkina Faso complicates delivery, heightens expenses, and can restrict opportunities for monitoring and evaluation.
- Measuring health outcomes: linking shifts in maternal mortality directly to a single CSR initiative is challenging; more practical metrics include facility-based births, infection levels, and WASH system performance.
Design principles for high-impact CSR
- Align with national strategies: work in coordination with the Ministry of Health, regional health directorates, and district planning teams to maintain coherence and long-term viability.
- Integrate WASH and maternal health: direct investments so maternity wards and delivery units consistently have access to safe water, sanitation, and essential hygiene supplies.
- Build local capacity: channel resources into training maintenance technicians, midwives, and community health workers, while establishing local funding systems for replacement parts and routine repairs.
- Use data-driven targeting: focus efforts on districts exhibiting the widest disparities in skilled birth attendance and basic water access, and introduce SMART indicators along with initial baseline assessments.
- Plan for long-term financing: blend capital subsidies with income-generating approaches (such as water kiosk fees, community health insurance, or public-private maintenance agreements) to sustain ongoing expenses.
- Foster community ownership and gender equity: involve women’s groups in decision-making, provide strong backing for female health staff, and craft interventions that eliminate obstacles faced by pregnant women.
Policy and collaboration prospects
- Multi-stakeholder platforms: pooled funds with government, donors, NGOs and multiple corporations create scale and reduce fragmentation.
- Performance-based contracts: companies can fund outcomes (e.g., increases in facility deliveries or reductions in facility water outages) rather than inputs alone, encouraging service sustainability.
- Innovation and technology: mobile payment for water kiosk fees, remote monitoring of water points, solar systems for sterilization and lighting, and telehealth for antenatal counseling can extend impact when paired with local training.
- Local enterprise development: supporting micro-enterprises for pump maintenance and sanitary product distribution creates jobs and strengthens local supply chains.
Oversight, assessment and reporting
Robust CSR programs adopt mixed-method M&E:
- Quantitative indicators: baseline and periodic surveys of water point functionality, percentage of health facilities with basic WASH, skilled birth attendance, and referral times.
- Qualitative feedback: community focus groups, health worker interviews, and gender audits to assess acceptability and barriers.
- Transparency and public reporting: publishing results, budgets, and lessons learned strengthens accountability and enhances replicability.
Practical recommendations for companies operating in Burkina Faso
- Prioritize integrated WASH upgrades in health centers that serve large catchment populations and have high maternal health needs.
- Partner with reputable NGOs and local governments to combine technical expertise with long-term stewardship.
- Design interventions with clear handover plans that include training, spare parts financing, and community governance structures.
- Use monitoring systems with publicly verifiable indicators and fund independent evaluations to build evidence of impact.
- Engage women and community leaders from project inception to ensure inclusion and to tailor services to local cultural contexts.
A focused CSR effort in Burkina Faso that brings together dependable water access for medical centers, targeted investments in transport and emergency referrals, and ongoing backing for frontline health personnel can markedly lower preventable risks for mothers and newborns. When private funding aligns with national agendas, encourages local ownership, and is assessed by real outcomes instead of visibility alone, corporate support becomes a lasting force for more resilient health systems and safer communities.
