350 likes | 516 Views
Cambodia: Poverty Reduction and Sanitation. Norman Hicks/Derko Kopitopoulos DRAFT—Dec. 6, 2005. Poverty and Health. National Strategic Development Plan(draft) “poverty reduction in the fastest possible manner is RGC’s foremost priority”
E N D
Cambodia: Poverty Reduction and Sanitation Norman Hicks/Derko Kopitopoulos DRAFT—Dec. 6, 2005
Poverty and Health • National Strategic Development Plan(draft) • “poverty reduction in the fastest possible manner is RGC’s foremost priority” • Poverty is seen as a lack of good health--Cambodian Millennium Development Goals: • Reduce child mortality • Improve maternal health • Combat AIDS, malaria and other diseases
Goals—Child and Infant Mortality • Under 5 mortality infant mortality • 1998 – 124 95 • 2005 -- 82 (est.) 66 (est.) • 2015 -- 65 (proj.) 50 (proj.) • [World Bank data • 2000 -- 134 95 • 2003 -- 140 97 ] • Source: National Development Strategic Plan (draft, 8 Nov 2005) Annex I and World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2005
Goals – water and sanitation • -Good progress in coverage of water; • - Reaching sanitation target is more doubtful • - Sanitation – where is the plan or strategy to reach these goals (not discussed in Strategy)?
Cross Country Evidence: Child mortality declines as sanitation improves… Data from World Development Indicators for 107 developing countries; most data is 2002 or 2003
CambodiaAll LDCs Child Mortality 140 76 Water access 34 78 Sanitation access 16 60 Secondary Education 25 62 GNI PPP 2050 4557 Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2005. Data for 2002-2003. “All LDCs” is average of 107 countries with data. Cambodia compared to all LDCs
Cambodia underperforms on child mortality compared to similar countries… • Given its income, Cambodia should have a child mortality of 104 instead of 140. • Graph shows child mortality against log GNI per capita; Cambodia is above the regression line showing that its predicted value is lower than actual value;
Cambodia underperforms on sanitation • A country with its per capita income should have sanitation coverage of about 49%, not 16% • Graph shows log GNI and sanitation coverage; Cambodia is below predicted coverage level
Cross Country Regression results:Child Mort = f(water, san, sec ed) • Regression results show that for a 10 percentage point change in coverage… • improved water supply reduces child mortality by 9.7% • Improved access to sanitation reduces child mortality by 7.9% • Increased secondary school enrollment reduces child mortality by 12.6%
What is “Sanitation”? • Sanitation • “Collection and treatment of excreta and community liquid wastes in a hygienic way so as not to endanger the health of individuals and the community as a whole” • It relates to: • Drainage • Housing conditions • Solid waste collection and disposal • Source: WHO 1987
Benefits provided by sanitation improvements Sanitation Education Infrastructure No visual, no olfactive impacts Natural resources preserved No fecal contamination No industrial pollution Less ponding water Privacy - Security Gender sensitivity Religious, cultural Less grit Less erosion Less WS pollution Environment Operations Social Tourism Fisheries Reuse Less treatment Less maintenance Social Cohesion Collective action Less diarrhea (90%) Less aneamia, blindness Less dengue, malaria Girls at school Time availability Less medical costs Other community activities Health Economy Community
Water borne diseases Diarrhoea: main indicator Excreted infections • Non-bacterial faeco-oral • Hepatitis, viruses, amoebiasis,… • Bacterial faeco-oral • E.Coli infection, Cholera, Typhoid, … • Helminths • Ascariasis, taenia, schistosomiasis,… • Source: WHO 1992
Other diseases related to inadequate sanitation • Vector diseases • Flies • Hepatitis, viruses,.. • Mosquitoes • Dengue, malaria,… • Rodents • Leptospirosis,… • Source: D.Mara 1996
Environmental hazards associated with water... • Health hazards • Human non-industrial activities • Nitrates (fertilizers) • Detergents (cleaning) • Industries • Heavy metals • Toxics • Source: D.Mara 1996
Diarrhea…Some facts • Diarrhea accounts for 1.8 million deaths per year; 90% are children. • 88% of diarrheal disease is attributed to unsafe water supply, inadequate sanitation and hygiene • A 30-50% reduction in diarrheal diseases can be achieved through feasible prevention –improvements in water supply, sanitation and hygiene. • Controlled field trials – point of use water treatment and safe water storage leads to 42% reduction in diarrhea • Handwashing with soap produces 40% reduction in diarrhea, and other intestinal infections by over 50% • Source: “The Hygiene Improvement Framework” UNICEF/World Bank/USAID EHP Joint Publication No 8 May 2004
Water supply Hygiene Fluids Sanitation Fingers Future Victim Feces Food Flies Fields/Floors Fecal contamination is the main source of diarrhea infections ….
Health Improvement Framework Access to Hardware Water supply systems Improved sanitation facilities Household technologies ● Soap ● Safe water containers Hygiene Promotion Communication Social mobilization Community participation Social marketing Advocacy Diarrheal Disease Prevention Enabling Environment Policy improvement Institutional strengthening Community organization Financing and cost recovery Crosssector & PP partnerships
Alternative approaches • Source: SIWI, 2000
Meeting the Demand Criteria economy incentives health education authorities support convenience operation infrastructure regulation Demand Conditions Offer
Responsibility share for < ---------------- > Individual Collective urban sanitation Household Blocks Community Authority Construction Construction Construction Promotion Latrines O&M O&M O&M Regulation Construction Construction Emptying Emptying Septic tanks Emptying Emptying Disposal Disposal Simplified Construction Construction Connections sewerage O&M O&M Small bore Septic tank Septic tank Construction Construction sewerage construction construction O&M O&M Conventional Construction Connections sewerage O&M Responsibilities—Collective vs. Individuals
A Possible Strategy… • Focus on Education – Raise Awareness • Raising awareness at all levels: household, community and national leaders of sanitation’s importance • Improve household practices • Water treatment – boiling, chlorination, in the home for untreated water • Hand washing (with soap), personal hygiene, food handling
Strategy (p.2) • Institutions and Strategy: • Develop a national sanitation plan outlining role of national and local govt., private sector, and households. • Focus on low cost improvements • Include drainage (often a higher priority in low lying areas).
Strategy (p. 3) • Hardware: Limit heavy investments • Modest facility improvements with public support, regulation, with subsidies for poor. • Improved septic tanks, latrines • In dense urban areas, develop community/block based simple sewer systems with heavy community involvement (condominium approach)
Benefits Reductions in diarrhoea risk from improvements • Source: DFID, 2003
Benefits Impact on diarrhoea in young children of sanitation infrastructure • Source: DFID, 2003
Cross Country Regression results:Child Mort = f(water, san, sec ed) Dependent Variable: child mortality R R2 F Prob.>F DF1 DF2 0.828 0.686 75.009 0.000 3 103 Adjusted R Squared = 0.677 Std. Error of Estimate = 36.436 Variable Beta B Std.Error t Prob.>t VIF TOL san -0.247 -0.602 0.227 -2.652 0.009 2.855 0.350 water -0.206 -0.729 0.309 -2.359 0.020 2.493 0.401 sec school -0.458 -0.950 0.179 -5.317 0.000 2.431 0.411 Constant = 227.282