Inadequate sanitation is one of the biggest contributing factors to child mortality under the age of five and yet it remains the most neglected of the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) sectors. Every year, 10 million children die before reaching their fifth birthday. This paper asserts that improved sanitation could bring a significant reduction in these deaths, and secure progress on MDG4. Recent research in Brazil has shown that access to improved sanitation alone reduced the rate of childhood diarrhoea by up to 43% and handwashing with soap at critical times alone has been shown to reduce the incidence of diarrhoea by 45%. The failure to increase access to sanitation acts as a brake on development and makes the realisation of broader dev...
Nearly nine million children under five years of age die annually. Diarrhea is considered to be the ...
Although widely accepted as being one of the most important public health advances of the past hundr...
Respiratory tract infections and diarrhoea are the two biggest killers of children in low income con...
The global environmental sanitation crisis cannot be denied: well over a century after the sanitary ...
Centre at the LSHTM, for the quality control of this document. Few problems affect so many in such a...
The Millennium Development Goals call for reducing by half the proportion of people without sustaina...
The report is a product arising from the work of the Sustainable Sanitation Alliance which was initi...
Slow progress is being made towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal for sanitatio...
Background: Diarrhoea is one of the leading causes of infant mortality. This article analyzes its co...
Diseases associated with poor sanitation cause a large bur-den of disease worldwide. Diarrhoea alone...
Although diarrhea has become a rare and mainly incon-venient condition in developed countries, it re...
Evaluating the Role of Sanitation in Improving Child Health and Nutrition: Does it Matter and Can We...
Although widely accepted as being one of the most important public health advances of the past hundr...
New research in this report, building on pioneering work from the World Bank's Water and Sanitation ...
the harsh reality of health inequality gap between the poor and rich countries. I would like to add ...
Nearly nine million children under five years of age die annually. Diarrhea is considered to be the ...
Although widely accepted as being one of the most important public health advances of the past hundr...
Respiratory tract infections and diarrhoea are the two biggest killers of children in low income con...
The global environmental sanitation crisis cannot be denied: well over a century after the sanitary ...
Centre at the LSHTM, for the quality control of this document. Few problems affect so many in such a...
The Millennium Development Goals call for reducing by half the proportion of people without sustaina...
The report is a product arising from the work of the Sustainable Sanitation Alliance which was initi...
Slow progress is being made towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal for sanitatio...
Background: Diarrhoea is one of the leading causes of infant mortality. This article analyzes its co...
Diseases associated with poor sanitation cause a large bur-den of disease worldwide. Diarrhoea alone...
Although diarrhea has become a rare and mainly incon-venient condition in developed countries, it re...
Evaluating the Role of Sanitation in Improving Child Health and Nutrition: Does it Matter and Can We...
Although widely accepted as being one of the most important public health advances of the past hundr...
New research in this report, building on pioneering work from the World Bank's Water and Sanitation ...
the harsh reality of health inequality gap between the poor and rich countries. I would like to add ...
Nearly nine million children under five years of age die annually. Diarrhea is considered to be the ...
Although widely accepted as being one of the most important public health advances of the past hundr...
Respiratory tract infections and diarrhoea are the two biggest killers of children in low income con...