Prioritize WASH needs through a WASH severity mapping

When facing a disaster, people have different severity of needs. Some communities and/or population groups are more affected than others, some are more resilient than others. Humanitarian response cannot reach all people in need of assistance: areas with the most severe needs should be identified and prioritized. This process is called needs severity mapping. Coordination platforms first undertake sectoral severity mapping, later consolidated by OCHA at the intersectoral level. There is no standard methodology to prioritize sectorial needs; two common approaches are however presented below:

When there is a large geographical area to be mapped with many administrative levels, it quickly becomes impossible to cross several indicators with a qualitative approach. In this case, analytical tools to integrate multiple indicators must be used. Two examples are presented below:

A severity map can finally be designed, and used to show severity of needs per geographic location. Regardless of the approach taken, the exercise should be documented to ensure full replicability of the process.

Refer to the 2015 OCHA Humanitarian Needs Comparison Tool presentation and tool box for more details on integrated severity mapping.