Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1 Water and Health: A Global Perspective Jim Shine Dept. Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1 Water and Health: A Global Perspective Jim Shine Dept. Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Water and Health: A Global Perspective Jim Shine Dept. Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health

2 2 Outline: Global Water Cycle - How much water is out there? - How much is accessible for human use? - How fast is it replaced? Water and Sanitation in Developing Nations - What are the problems with water quality and quantity in developing nations? -What is the magnitude of the problem? -What can be done?

3 3 Global Water Resources

4 4 Anthropocentric View of the Global Water Cycle

5 5 Global Water Cycle: Reservoir % of Total Residence Time Oceans97.33,100 yrs Snow and Ice2.116,000 yrs Groundwater0.67300 yrs Lakes0.011 - 100 yrs Soil0.005300 days Rivers0.000112-20 days Atmosphere0.00110 days Biota0.00004---

6 6 Annual Precipitation

7 7 Spatial and Temporal Variability of Water Monthly Runoff as Fraction of Annual Runoff:

8 How Much Water Do We Consume? Note: 2500 m 3 /capita/yr = 6,850 Liters/day

9 Water Footprint of Agricultural Products

10

11 11

12 12 Geographic distribution and water stress

13 13 Water and Sanitation in Developing Nations:

14 Reported Cases of Waterborne Infectious Disease in the United States (1920 – 1992) CDC

15 Milwaukee Cryptosporidiosis Outbreak 1993  Spring rains and filtration adjustments produce sharp increases in turbidity  400,000 cases of disease 4,000 hospitalizations >100 deaths  Water quality did not violate existing standards  Almost missed causal agent

16 Water and Health: The Global Perspective: 2011 - Not Encouraging - Worldwide….. - 1.1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water - 2.6 billion lack access to adequate sanitation - Estimate: 1.8 million deaths per year attributable to inadequate water and sanitation. - 3% of all deaths - 11% of deaths in children less than 4 yrs. - Millennium Development Goals: Halve these numbers by 2015

17 Water and Health: The Global Perspective:2012 Data - Not Encouraging - Worldwide….. - 780 million people lack access to safe drinking water - 2.5 billion lack access to adequate sanitation - Estimate: 1.8 million deaths per year attributable to inadequate water and sanitation. - 3% of all deaths - 11% of deaths in children less than 4 yrs. - Millennium Development Goals: Halve these numbers by 2015

18 Percentage of population with access to safe water by country, 2000 Source: Pacific Institute

19 How much is enough water? By contrast, acceptable water quantities in developed countries range from 350-850 liters per person per day (direct consumption)

20 How far is too far? UNICEF estimates that every year in developing countries, 10 million person-years are spent fetching water

21 Population with No Access to Improved Sanitation (2004)

22 22

23 23 Predominant Means in Developing Countries Not improved  Service or bucket latrines (where excreta are manually removed)  Public latrines  Open latrine Improved  Connection to a public sewer  Connection to septic system  Pour-flush latrine  Simple pit latrine  Ventilated improved pit latrine http://www.who.int/docstore/water_sanitation_health/Globassessment/Global1.2.htm

24 Improved WATSAN & Infant Death 0 20 40 60 80 100 EgyptUgandaPeruCameroon UN Human Development Report 2006 Improved Water Improved Sanitation Reduction in risk of mortality (%)

25  At the Millennium Summit in 2000 adopted the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).  Water & Health Goal: “Halving the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water or adequate sanitation by 2015”.  In concrete terms: Delivering improved water services to almost 700,000 people every day for the next 15 years Goal 1Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger Goal 2Achieve universal primary education Goal 3Promote gender equality and empower women Goal 4Reduce child mortality Goal 5Improve maternal health Goal 6Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases Goal 7Ensure environmental sustainability Goal 8Develop a Global Partnership for Development MDGs Millennium Development Goals

26 March 2012 Report

27 The MDG Drinking Water Target Has Been Met!

28 - 11% of world’s population (783 million) still lack access to safe water - 2.5 billion people still lack access to basic sanitation -Drinking water quality & reliability not assessed - only access to improved sources - testing at national level too costly - Increases in drinking water access primarily in China and India - 40% of those lacking drinking water from sub-Saharan Africa - Some countries falling back to pre-1990 rates of coverage Other Observations……

29 Progress in Drinking Water Coverage: Sub-Saharan Africa not on target to reach goal

30 The Sanitation Goal Will Not Be Met

31 Progress on Sanitation: Sanitation Trend: Target to be missed by ~800 Million people

32 Sanitation Improvement by Region:

33 Urban vs. Rural Situation

34 Environmental Risks: Unsafe water, sanitation, and hygiene Urban air pollution Indoor smoke from solid fuels Lead exposure Climate change WHO Global Burden of Disease Report (2004, 2010 Data) Available at: http://www.who.int/healthinfo/global_burden_disease/global_health_risks/en/index.html

35 35 Global Burden of Disease from Unsafe Water, Sanitation and Hygiene: Results (Year 2004) Diarrheal disease - Estimated 1.9 million deaths (64.2 million DALYs) attributable to unsafe WSH - 81% of WSH deaths occur in children (0 – 4 years) Total burden of Unsafe WSH: - 4.4% of all deaths and 8.1% of DALYs - 23% of deaths and 19% of DALYs in children (0 – 4 years) - 98% of deaths and 99% of DALYs occur in developing countries - “low income” and “low middle income” Note: Other ‘Water’ Diseases in Other Risk Categories - Example: schistosomiasis, trachoma, ascariasis, trichuriasis and hookworm disease examined in ‘Underweight’ category

36 Deaths attributed to 19 leading factors, by country income level, 2004 WHO 2008

37 Percentage of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) attributed to 19 leading risk factors, by country income level, 2004 WHO 2008

38 38 Leading Causes of Death, 1990 - 2010

39 39 Leading Causes of DALY’s, 1990 - 2010

40 40 Unsafe Water, Sanitation and Hygiene: Attributable Deaths by Age and WHO Region for the Year 2004 WHO 2008 0-45-1415-2930-4445-5960-6970-7980+Total Africa 676 974 48 662 28 102 25 730 36 573 34 046 29 659 16 297 896 042 Americas 44 250 562 586 1 086 1 561 1 776 3 347 6 151 59 318 East. Med. 188 130 980 3 469 6 963 7 030 4 478 6 371 8 614 226 035 Europe 28 263 232 290 288 415 353 883 2 108 32 832 SE Asia 527 506 1 465 2 949 13 011 9 206 9 732 12 879 21 919 598 668 W. Pacific 79 606 742 990 1 763 2 594 2 806 2 867 3 698 95 066

41 41


Download ppt "1 Water and Health: A Global Perspective Jim Shine Dept. Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google