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Sulabh Wash

Sulabh WASH Campaign

The Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) is making a concerted Global effort to accelerate progress towards provision of safe water, sanitation and hygiene. It has launched the WASH (Water, Sanitation & Hygiene) Campaign which aims to raise the commitment of political and social leaders to achieving these goals all over the world.

Sulabh International has been entrusted to take up initiatives and adopt strategies for the Sulabh WASH Campaign in India. Sulabh has launched various activities in India in June 2003 and other countries for making the WASH campaign successful. WASH campaign aims to achieve tangible results towards creating awareness and undertaking activities at various levels and in various spheres for achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) related to water supply, sanitation and hygiene.

The objective of the Sulabh WASH campaign is sustainable human development through providing universal access to Hygiene, Sanitation & affordable Safe Water. The strategy is to accelerate achievement of sustainable water, sanitation and waste management services to all people, paying special attention to the unmet needs of the un-served. This can be achieved through collaboration among developing countries and external support agencies and concerted action-oriented programmes.

WASH Facts and Figures

  1. 1.1 billion people in the world do not have access to safe water, roughly one-sixth of the world’s population.
  2. 2.4 billion people in the world do not have access to adequate sanitation, about two-fifths of the world’s population.
  3. 2.2 million people in developing countries, most of them children, die every year from diseases associated with lack of access to safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene.
  4. Some 6,000 children die every day from diseases associated with lack of access to safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene – equivalent to 20 jumbo jets crashing every day.
  5. At any one time it is estimated that half of the world’s hospital beds are occupied by patients suffering from water-borne diseases.
  6. 200 million people in the world are infected with schistosomiasis, of whom 20 million suffer severe consequences. The disease is still found in 74 countries of the world. Scientific studies show that a 77% reduction of incidence from the disease was achieved through well designed water and sanitation interventions.
  7. The average distance that women in Africa and Asia walk to collect water is 6 km.
  8. The weight of water that women in Africa and Asia carry on their heads is the equivalent of your airport luggage allowance (20kg).
  9. The average person in the developing world uses 10 litres of water a day.
  10. The average person in the United Kingdom uses 135 litres of water every day.
  11. One flush of your toilet uses as much water as the average person in the developing world uses for a whole day’s washing, cleaning, cooking and drinking.
  12. Comparative costs: In Europe $11 billion is spent each year on ice cream; in USA and Europe, $17 billion is spent on pet food; in Europe $105 billion is spent annually on alcoholic drinks, ten times the amount required to ensure water, sanitation and hygiene for all.
  13. In the past 10 years diarrhoea has killed more children than all the people lost to armed conflict since World War II.
  14. In China, India and Indonesia twice as many people are dying from diarrhoeal diseases as from HIV/AIDS.
  15. In 1998, 308,000 people died from war in Africa, but more than two million (six times as many) died of diarrhoeal disease.
  16. The population of the Kibeira slum in Nairobi, Kenya pay up to five times the price for a litre of water than the average American citizen.
  17. An estimated 25% of people in developing country cities use water vendors purchasing their water at significantly higher prices than piped water.
  18. Projections for 2025 indicate that the number of people living in water-stressed countries will increase to 3 billion – a six-fold increase. Today, 470 million people live in regions where severe shortages exist.
  19. The simple act of washing hands with soap and water can reduce diarrhoeal disease by one-third.
  20. Following the introduction of the Guatemalan Handwashing Initiative in 1998, there were 322,000 fewer cases of diarrhoea each year amongst the 1.5 million children under 5 nationwide in the country's lowest income groups.
  21. In Zambia, one in five children die before their fifth birthday. In contrast in the UK fewer than 1% of children die before they reach the age of five.
  22. A study in Karachi found that people living in areas without adequate sanitation who had no hygiene education spend six times more on medical treatments than those with sanitation facilities.
  23. Waterborne diseases (the consequence of a combination of lack of clean water supply and inadequate sanitation) cost the Indian economy 73 million working days a year. And a cholera outbreak in Peru in the early 1990s cost the economy US$1 billion in lost
    tourism and agricultural exports in just 10 weeks.
  24. Improved water quality reduces childhood diarrhoea by 15-20% BUT better hygiene through handwashing and safe food handling reduces it by 35% AND safe disposal of children’s faeces leads to a reduction of nearly 40%.
  25. At any time, 1.5 billion people suffer from parasitic worm infections stemming from human excreta and solid wastes in the environment. Intestinal worms can be controlled through better sanitation, hygiene and water. These parasites can lead to malnutrition, anaemia and retarded growth, depending upon the severity of the infection.
  26. It is estimated that pneumonia, diarrhoea, tuberculosis and malaria, which account for 20% of global disease burden, receive less than 1% of total public and private funds devoted to health research.
  27. Ecological sanitation is one option being practised in some communities in China, Mexico, Vietnam, etc. Excreta contains valuable nutrients. We produce 4.56 kg nitrogen, 0.55 kg phosphorous, and 1.28 kg potassium per person per year from faeces and urine. This is enough to produce wheat and maize for one person every year.
  28. One gramme of faeces can contains:10,000,000 Viruses, 1,000,000 bacteria, 1,000 parasite cysts, 100 parasite eggs.

Source: 2003 Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council

 

Email : sulabh@envis.nic.in
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Sulabh International Institute of Health & Hygiene (SIIHH)
Patronised By Ministry of Environment & Forests (MoEF), Govt. of India.


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