The rural communities in Nigeria are bedeviled with an avalanche of challenges including infrastructural deficit ranging
from poor road network, lack of potable drinking water, poor sanitary conditions, poverty and diseases. All these have
attracted the attention of global agencies such as World Health Organizations (WHO), United Nation Children Emergency
Fund (UNICEF), National Centre for Diseases Control (NCDC) to initiate policies and programmes aimed at
ameliorating the deplorable conditions. But unfortunately, noble as these efforts and initiatives may be, proper articulation