Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water...

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Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health

Transcript of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water...

Page 1: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health

Page 2: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Objective

• To understand the size of the global water supply shortage

• To identify specific reasons that technology must be dramatically enhanced to meet the global water needs

• To develop a plan for increasing safe water supplies/sanitation/hygiene to developing countries

Page 3: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

United Nations- Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)

Goal 7: Ensure environmental sustainability• Target 9: Integrate the principles of sustainable

development into country policies and program and reverse the loss of environmental resources.

• Target 10: Halve by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.

• Integrate sanitation into water resources management strategies.

Page 4: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

United Nations- Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)

Goal 4: Reduce child mortality• Target 5: Reduce by two-thirds, between 1990

and 2015, the under-five mortality rate.• Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other

diseases• Target 8: Have halted by 2015 and begun to

reverse the incidence of malaria and other major diseases.

Page 5: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Access to water supply as of 2002

In 2002, 1.1 billion people lacked access to improved water sources, which represented 17% of the global population.

• Of the 1.1 billion without improved water sources, nearly two thirds live in Asia.

• In sub-Saharan Africa, 42% of the population is still without improved water.

• In order to meet the water supply MDG target, an additional 260,000 people per day up to 2015 should gain access to improved water sources.

Page 6: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Access to sanitation as of 2002

• In 2002, 2.6 billion people lacked access to improved sanitation (toilet/shower/soap), which represented 42% of the world’s population.

• Over half of those without improved sanitation – nearly 1.5 billion people – live in China and India.

• In sub-Saharan Africa sanitation coverage is a mere 36%.

• In order to meet the sanitation MDG target, an additional 370 000 people per day up to 2015 should gain access to improved sanitation.

Page 7: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Disease OverviewDiarrhea• 1.8 million people die every year from diarrheal diseases

(including cholera); 90% are children under 5, mostly indeveloping countries.

• 88% of diarrheal disease is attributed to unsafe water supply, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene.

• Improved water supply reduces diarrhea morbidity bybetween 6% to 25%.

• Improvements in drinking-water quality through householdwater treatment, such as chlorination at point of use,can lead to a reduction of diarrhea episodes by35% to 39%.

Page 8: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Disease Overview

Malaria• 1.3 million people die of malaria each year,

90% of whom are children under 5.• There are 396 million episodes of malaria

every year, most of the disease burden is in Africa south of the Sahara.

Page 9: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Disease Overview

Schistosomiasis• An estimated 160 million people are infected with

schistosomiasis.• The disease causes tens of thousands of deaths every year,

mainly in sub-Saharan Africa.• It is strongly related to unsanitary excreta disposal and absence

of nearby sources of safe water.• Basic sanitation reduces the disease by up to 77%.• Man-made reservoirs and poorly designed irrigation

schemes are main drivers of schistosomiasis expansion andintensification.

Page 10: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Disease Overview

Intestinal helminthes (Ascariasis, Trichuriasis, Hookworm disease)

• 133 million people suffer from high intensity Intestinal helminthes infections, which often leads to severe consequences such as cognitive impairment, massive dysentery, or anemia.

• Access to safe water and sanitation facilities and better

• hygiene practice can reduce morbidity from ascariasis by 29% and hookworm by 4%.

Page 11: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Stats

• More than 3.5 million people die each year from water-related disease; 84 percent are children. Nearly all deaths, 98 percent, occur in the developing world.

• Lack of access to clean water and sanitation kills children at a rate equivalent of a jumbo jet crashing every four hours.

• 443 million school days are lost each year due to water-related illness.

Page 12: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Stats

• The water and sanitation crisis claims more lives through disease than any war claims through guns.

• An American taking a five-minute shower uses more water than the typical person living in a developing country slum uses in a whole day.

• More than two thirds of people without an improved water source live on less than $2 a day.

Page 13: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

Impact on Children

• Every 15 seconds, a child dies from a water-related disease.

• Children in poor environments often carry 1,000 parasitic worms in their bodies at any time.

• 1.4 million children die as a result of diarrhea each year.

Page 14: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

So now what?

• Over 50 percent of all water projects fail and less than five percent of projects are visited, and far less than one percent have any longer-term monitoring.

• $1 spent on water projects corresponds to $8 in savings due to less health related issues

Page 15: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Links to Health. Objective To understand the size of the global water supply shortage To identify specific reasons that.

So now what?

• New solutions need to be brought forward that can improve water quality throughout the world

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