WASH and Health
WASH and Health
WASH and Health
‘Ending extreme poverty in all its forms’ should be the primary focus of the post-2015
framework and should encourage an integrated approach to tackling poverty, hunger
and under-nutrition, ill-health and inequality, which recognises the interdependent
nature of outcomes in each area.
Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) are fundamental to health. Despite progress on
child mortality, infectious diseases still pose the largest threat to the health of young
children. An infection such as diarrhoea is the third biggest killer of children under five
in Sub-Saharan Africa1 and almost 90% of cases of diarrhoea are caused by poor
WASH2. 50% of under-nutrition is due to lack of WASH3, and under-nutrition is an
underlying risk factor for around 30% of under-five deaths4. Repeated episodes of
diarrhoea can make under-nourished children predisposed to pneumonia5. A lack of
hygiene and sanitation and the associated diarrhoea also contributes to stunting and
inhibited cognitive development in millions of children worldwide. Globally, 2.5 billion
people still lack access to sanitation6, causing water sources, homes and surrounding
environments to become contaminated and contributing to poor health and
preventable child deaths.
A central critique of the health MDGs has been in relation to their focus on specific
diseases and reducing mortality rates. This has, in many cases, resulted in ‘vertical’,
disease-specific approaches that have actually made it more difficult for health
systems to respond to the national burden of disease in a holistic way. Also, by
focusing on global averages, the international community has in many cases failed to
support the hardest to reach people or drive lasting systemic change.
Any new framework must learn lessons from the MDGs. Of paramount importance is
the need to recognise that further progress in improving health and wellbeing can only
be made by reducing inequalities and recognising the broader determinants of health
outcomes, including WASH.
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WASH and health in the post-2015 framework
Following the UN post-2015 consultation on health, which took place between
September 2012 and March 2013, a consensus between key stakeholders emerged
that the post-2015 framework should address the role of health in a multi-layered way.
In the first instance, ensuring the health and wellbeing of all should be at the heart of
the entire framework. Secondly, there should be cross-sector goals to maximise health
at all stages of life, underpinned by specific goals and targets on equitable and
sustainable delivery of health-related services.
Within this approach, WASH has a crucial role to play in ensuring health goals can be
achieved. Close integration within health systems and programmes will also contribute
to the prioritisation and effectiveness of WASH programmes.
2 Health goals and targets should focus on maximising health at all stages of life and
explicitly recognise the role of various sectors and actors (beyond the remit of the
health sector) in the attainment of sustainable and equitable health provision. This
is an important entry point for measures to improve access to WASH, as well as
other sectors, such as education.
3 Health goals and targets should build on the concept of a ‘universal social floor’
and prioritise addressing the unfinished business of the existing MDGs (reducing
child mortality, improving maternal health, and combating HIV/AIDS and other
diseases) and further reducing the burden of major non-communicable diseases.
Measures to improve WASH should be included to support the drive to reduce child
and maternal mortality, as well as to tackle infectious diseases. This should
incorporate a variety of measures including:
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Underpinning the principles outlined above would be a commitment to universal
health coverage (UHC). To be effective, it is vital that the implementation of UHC goes
beyond access to healthcare services alone and also addresses prevention, treatment,
care and support. Action for Global Health8 defines universal health coverage as ‘when
all people have access to health services (promotion, prevention, treatments and
rehabilitation), without fear of falling into poverty’. This includes infrastructure, such
as roads, access to information and education, improved health systems, and reliable
access to accurate information, in addition to basic health inputs, such as WASH.
Universal health coverage must therefore include:
1 Include a dedicated goal on water and sanitation and set ambitious targets to
achieve universal access to WASH by 2030 that prioritise the following9:
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• Water, sanitation and hygiene are sustainable and inequalities in access
have been progressively eliminated.
Endnotes
1 Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) 2012
2 World Health Organization (2008) Safer water, better health: Costs, benefits and sustainability of
interventions to protect and promote health. Available at:
http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241596435_eng.pdf
3 World Health Organization (2008) Safer water, better health: Costs, benefits and sustainability of
www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs178/en/index.html
5 Schlaudecker E P, Steinhoff M C and Moore S R (2011) Interactions of diarrhoea, pneumonia and
malnutrition in childhood: Recent evidence from developing countries. Current Opinion in Infectious
Disease, vol 24, no 5, pp 496-502
6 WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) (2013) Progress on drinking water and sanitation,
network of development and health organisations calling for better policies to support health services in
the developing world. See www.actionforglobalhealth.eu/index.php?id=197 for further information.
9 WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme shared vision for progressive realisation of the human right
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