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Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) and waterborne disease

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Presentation on theme: "Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) and waterborne disease"— Presentation transcript:

1 Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) and waterborne disease
Richard Gelting, Ph.D., P.E. Center for Global Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Center for Global Health, Division of Global Health Protection

2 Diarrhea = 2nd largest cause of <5 mortality
Importance of WASH Diarrhea = 2nd largest cause of <5 mortality 88% of deaths from diarrheal diseases attributable to unsafe WASH conditions Poor WASH also contributes to: respiratory diseases (handwashing) Neglected tropical diseases (e.g., trachoma) Malnutrition Vector-borne diseases (poor drainage forming mosquito breeding habitat) So the question arises as to why Haiti’s infrastructure is so divergent from the rest of the region.

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4 At least basic access to Drinking Water Sources1
Access to Water and Sanitation in Haiti Based on WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program 2015 At least basic access to Drinking Water Sources1 Urban 81% (99% regional average LAC) Rural 40% (86%) Overall 64% (96%) Access to Improved Sanitation Facilities2 Urban 37% (90%) Rural 22% (68%) Overall 31% (86%) 1 Either safely managed source or improved drinking water source within 30 min (improved = piped water into dwelling or yard, public standpipe, tubewell or borehole, protected spring, rainwater) 2 Either safely managed facility or improved sanitation facility not shared (improved = facility that hygienically separates human excreta from human contact) Reference: WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) for Water and Sanitation

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8 WASH Interventions We know WASH works:
Improved water sources can lead to ~21% reduction in diarrhea illness Improved sanitation can lead to a ~37% reduction in diarrhea illness Handwashing can reduce the number of diarrhea cases by 35% Improved drinking water quality can lead to a ~45% reduction in diarrheal episodes

9 Typhoid Fever Trend (Mortality per 100,000) and
Lessons from History Typhoid Fever Trend (Mortality per 100,000) and Sanitary Interventions, 1900–1936 Cutler D, Miller G. Demography. 2005;42(1):1-22.

10 Increase coverage of sustainable WASH facilities and services
Objectives Increase coverage of sustainable WASH facilities and services Aligned with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Including health care facilities, schools, markets Strengthen capacity to sustain facilities and services Technical and administrative Improving the situation will require long term effort

11 Increasing coverage for Sanitation takes time

12 THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
Center for Global Health Division of Global Health Protection


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