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WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation, (JMP) Media Round Table 27-3-12. Why Water, Sanitation, Hygiene?.
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WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation, (JMP) Media Round Table 27-3-12
Why Water, Sanitation, Hygiene? 1.7 million (22% of world total) of the Under-5 children that died in 2010 were IndianDiarrhea in one among the largest killer diseases (13% deaths)Worldwide over 80% of diarrheal deaths are due to unsafe water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene Global Child Mortality: Estimates of Levels and Causes for 2000-2010 (preliminary results)-Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University
Responsible for monitoring global progress towards the MDG drinking water and sanitation target; after 2000 it is based exclusively on household survey and census data (2011 Census data came too late for inclusion in the 2012 JMP)
MDG target + indicators MDG 7 Target 7c: • Halve, by 2015, the [1990] proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation MDG indicators: • Proportion of the population that usesan improved drinking water source (urban and rural) • Proportion of the population that usesan improved sanitation facility (urban and rural)
“Improved” means…. An improved drinking water source is: “a source that by the nature of its construction adequately protects the source from outside contamination in particular with fecal matter” Animproved sanitation facility: “ a facility that hygienically separates human waste from human contact”
JMP definitions Sanitation Drinking Water • Flush/pour flush to: • piped sewer system • septic tank • pit latrine • Ventilated improved pit (VIP) latrine • Pit latrine with slab • Composting toilet • Piped into dwelling, plot or yard • Public tap/standpipe • Tube well/borehole • Protected dug well • Protected spring • Rainwater collection IMPROVED • Unprotected dug well • Unprotected spring • Cart with small tank/drum • Tanker truck • Surface water (river, dam, lake, pond, stream, canal, irrigation canal) • Bottled water (unless 2nd Improved source) • Flush/Pour flush to elsewhere • Pit latrine without slab/open pit • Bucket • Hanging toilet/hanging latrine • Shared and public facilities • No facilities, bush or field UN-IMPROVED
India MDG target (85%) has been reached! Water Quality Population (millions) 874 1225 227 367 646 857
India MDG target (69%) Will not be reached! 626 655 Population (millions) 874 1225 227 367 646 857
State progress to meet the Sanitation MDG India will reach MDG at this rate by 2054 only
Conclusions • Water MDG has been met globally with India contributing the most to this achievement; Water quality issues remain a concern • Sanitation is not on target – still 626 million open defecators in India • JMP ties in well with the census figures eg open defecation rate of 51% (JMP) and 53% (Census 2011) for total and 67% (JMP) and 69% (Census 2011) for rural • India will reach MDG at this rate by 2054 only • Need for sustained demand generation for accelerating sanitation • UNICEF is working with the Govt on accelerating demand generation through communication strategies, community approaches to sanitation, strengthening supply systems and monitoring of progress
Role of the Media Active participation of media to meet the MDG sanitation target 1.Keep the discourse around sanitation and hygiene alive in the policy domain, for critical actions to be taken. 2. Influence the general public especially middle classes to advocate for the importance of improved sanitation. 3. Generate mass awareness on key behaviors and practices which need to be adopted for improved sanitation. 4. Report based on qualitative and quantitative evidence from the field. ( UNICEF happy to support field visits and data analysis)