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Sanitation 'Crucial' for Tackling
Water-Borne Disease
Effective and affordable interventions that provide the global
population with access to safe drinking water and adequate
sanitation are needed if water-borne diseases are ever to
be controlled.
This is the conclusion of a WHO report entitled 'Safe Water,
Better Health', released last week (26 June).
The report provides for the first time country-by-country
estimates of disease caused by poor water quality, sanitation
and hygiene.
It finds that children, particularly in developing countries,
suffer a disproportionate share of the disease burden caused
by unsafe drinking water and poor sanitation.
The WHO estimates that almost ten per cent of the global
disease burden is caused by unsafe water and sanitation and
that the economic return of investing in improved access to
safe drinking water was ten-fold.
The WHO's findings echo a study by researchers from the University
of Michigan, who published a paper on the challenges of achieving
global sanitation coverage in the journal Environmental Science
and Technology.
They analysed barriers to global sanitation coverage such
as inadequate investment, water availability, poor or nonexistent
policies, governance, poor resources and gender disparities,
and looked at the impact on water resources of various sanitation
technology choices.
The researchers found that water availability was not a huge
barrier at a global scale. Appropriate technological innovation
is most needed to provide adequate toilets for the world's
population, especially in water-scarce areas.
Dave Watkins, a researcher at the University of Michigan
and one of the authors of the report, told SciDev.Net that
while universal safe drinking water and sanitation access
seems achievable, their study shows that lack of financial
resources is the greatest impediment to sanitation coverage.
"Just a fraction of a per cent of wealthy countries'
gross domestic product would be sufficient to meet global
funding needs," he says.
"[But] use of appropriate technology, and local capacity
building to ensure project sustainability are also necessary.
Missing one or more of these key ingredients can easily lead
to failed projects, which discourages investment."
Watkins believes the social and economic benefits of improved
water and sanitation are grossly underestimated, and this
is a route for future research.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date:1 July 2008

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