UN calls for int'l cooperation to halt open defecation

Tehran, Nov 20, IRNA - The UN has called on religious, education and opinion leaders in developing regions to join government officials and champion a halt to open defecation, a practice of 1 billion people worldwide — one-sixth of the developing world’s 5.9 billion inhabitants.

According to a press release issued by the UN Information Center to Tehran (UNIC), Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson highlighted the health threat posed by lack of access to sanitation, and the particular dangers open defecation poses for women and girls.

He made the remarks during a ceremony held at UN Headquarters in New York marking the World Toilet Day on Wednesday.

The ceremony was coordinated by UN-Water which is the United Nations inter-agency coordination mechanism for all freshwater and sanitation related matters.

“We know that political will at the highest level is critical to address these challenges. However, we also know that success at ending open defecation goes beyond infrastructure. It requires the understanding of behaviors, cultural attitudes and social norms,” Eliasson said.
He added, “Throughout all life stages, women and girls bear the greatest burdens caused by the lack of toilet access. Girls are more likely to drop out of school if they don’t have access to a safe and clean toilet. Women and girls can also risk harassment and sexual abuse when trying to use public toilets or when trying to find somewhere to defecate in the open. Universal access to sanitation has a clear role to play in defending women’s safety, dignity and equality.”

The Deputy Secretary-General, on behalf of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in March 2013 launched the Call to Action on Sanitation. This in turn inspired the UN’s End Open Defecation campaign created earlier this year.

Addressing a global membership organization hosted by the United Nations Executive Director of the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council Chris Williams said, “The active support and efforts of leaders of religion, education and public opinion are needed as much as that of elected and other government officials. We call on all leaders of societies and cultures where open defecation habits are still tolerated: Help us end the taboos associated with frank talk about the dangers of the practice and the benefits of proper sanitation and hygiene.”

“A generation ago, the idea of smoke-free restaurants, theatres, airports, banks and other public places seemed improbable. Attitudes were changed by the concerted focus of political leaders, health officials and advocates, and today the notion of sharing such spaces with smokers has become almost universally foreign. It is beyond time for all of humanity to have access to adequate toilets and to use them.”

The practice of open defecation is deeply rooted in poverty but has also been related to convention and customs in some countries and societies — representing, for example, some of the only times other than worship when women from rigid family circumstances may meet.

In sub-Saharan Africa, where 25% of the population practices open defecation, diarrhea is the third biggest killer of children under five years old.

Studies estimate that a child dies every 2.5 minutes because of unsafe drinking water, poor sanitation and hygiene. Children with diarrhea eat less and are less able to absorb the nutrients from their food, which makes them even more susceptible to bacteria-related illnesses. Compounding the problem: the children most vulnerable to acute diarrhea also lack access to potentially life-saving health services.

The recent Ebola outbreak, meanwhile, shone a public spotlight on the open defecation issue in West Africa where worried health officials in Lagos and Nigeria, citing human waste as a vector of the virus, appealed through the media for citizens practicing open defecation to stop.

In Liberia, the nation most affected by Ebola, roughly half the nation’s 4.2 million citizens don’t use toilets; in rural Sierra Leone, the second worst-hit country, the estimate is 28%.

WHO and UNICEF have issued joint guidance on WASH and Ebola (http://bit.ly/1E5vyYn), including the need for separate toilets for use by patients and health care workers in Ebola clinics.
UN-Water Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water:

Critical gaps in monitoring; resources not targeted to greater needs; rural sanitation neglected

Recent estimates from the WHO and UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme indicate open defecation was almost halved in developing regions between 1990 and 2012, down from 31% to 17% of those populations.

About 825 million people — 82% of the 1 billion practicing open defecation — reside in just 10 countries:

Five in Asia:

• India, 597 million (47% of the national population)

• Indonesia, 54 million (21%)

• Pakistan, 41 million (22.5%)

• Nepal, 11 million (40%)

• China, 10 million (<1%)

Five in Africa:

• Nigeria, 39 million (22%)

• Ethiopia, 34 million (36%)

• Sudan, 17 million (45%)

• Niger, 13 million (72%)

• Mozambique, 10 million (38%)

In the rest of the world, the number of people practicing open defecation is estimated at 182 million.

Published on Wednesday by WHO on behalf of UN-Water, the Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS) report says “countries are unable to confirm whether funding is directed towards actual needs or to report back on whether they have met financial allocation targets.”

“More importantly, data often does not inform decision-making: less than half of countries use data in the allocation of resources to sanitation. Existing plans for reaching disadvantaged groups are commonly left unmonitored. Less than half of low and middle income countries track progress in extending sanitation services to the poor.”

The vast majority of those without improved sanitation are impoverished rural residents. And, according to the report, where rural sanitation progress has occurred, it has primarily benefitted richer people, increasing inequalities.

“Political commitments to ensure everyone has access to water and sanitation are essential to human health and are at an all-time high,” said Dr. Maria Neira, Director of the WHO Department of Public Health and the Environment.

“International aid for the sector is on the rise. But we continue to see major financial gaps at the country level, particularly in rural areas.”

GLAAS data show sanitation expenditure as a proportion of overall WASH expenditure growing from 20% in 2010 to 40% in 2014. Aid commitments for sanitation, however, fell to one-fourth of water and sanitation in ODA in 2012, compared to one-third in 2010.

Estimates indicate that expenditures for rural sanitation comprise less than 10% of total water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) financing.

“Despite considerable health benefits to be had through hygiene promotion … hygiene remains a neglected component of WASH,” says the report.

Open defecation is declining steadily in Asia, and in Latin America and the Caribbean.

In South Asia the percentage dropped from 65% in 1990 to 38% in 2012, with the greatest reductions in that region recorded in Nepal (from 86% in 1990 to 40% in 2012), Bangladesh (from 34% to 3%) and Pakistan (from 52% to 23%).

The 25% of people in sub-Saharan Africa not using toilets is down from 36% in 1990. However, the practice is growing in 26 of sub-Saharan Africa’s 44 countries.

Countries are taking action and the Sanitation and Water for All partnership has created an overview of national commitments: http://sanitationandwaterforall.org/commitments/country-commitments.

For example, India Prime Minister Narendra Modi has pledged 111 million toilets and an end to open defecation by 2019, an ambition channeling the view of the nation’s late spiritual leader Mahatma Gandhi, who termed sanitation “more important than independence.”

Nigeria has set a target date of 2018 for the end of open defecation, while Burundi is evaluating a framework for eliminating the practice by the end of 2016.

Meanwhile, from 1990 to 2012, open defecation in Ethiopia fell by 55 percentage points, from 92% to 37%. According to the GLAAS report launched today, key elements of Ethiopia’s success include:

* Strong political will for improving access to water and sanitation. According to the Ministry of Health: “The government has shown demonstrable, high level political commitment to enhanced sanitation coverage over the past few years. This goal is reflected in the national Health Extension Program, the National Hygiene and Sanitation Strategy and a national step-by-step protocol and Sanitation Action Plan (SAP) for achieving universal access by 2015. There has been significant improvement in access to safe sanitation and hygiene in Ethiopia since the Health Extension Program began in 2002/2003.”

* Human resources and education. Health Extension Workers educate communities about sanitation and help create cultural acceptance of toilets. The nation’s 39,000 HEWs are trained at nine Training Vocational and Educational Centers and the government has upgraded the degree levels for sanitation and hygiene to improve qualifications.

Governments that have invested in behavior change programs, rather than just in constructing of toilets have seen the most positive results.

Community approaches such as Community Led Total Sanitation, for example, offer an innovative approach to eliminate open defecation. This approach focuses on the behavioral change needed to ensure real and sustainable improvements and the creation of open defecation-free villages, since even a minority practicing open defecation puts a whole village at greater risk of disease. Through the use of simple and effective demonstrations which explain the link between open defecation and disease, families make the decision to change their sanitation practices and the community as a whole comes together to decide on what steps need to be taken to achieve an open defecation free environment.

Head of UNICEF’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) programs Sanjay Wijesekera says, “UNICEF has been successfully implementing these approaches at scale in more than 50 countries, leading to some 26 million people abandoning open defecation in the last six years. They encourage innovation, mutual support and appropriate local solutions, thus leading to greater ownership and sustainability.”
 

http://www.irna.ir/en/News/2785234/

 

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