BackgroundLack of household sanitation, specifically toilet facilities, can adversely affect the safety of women and girls by requiring them to leave their households to defecate alone and at night, leaving them more vulnerable to non-marital sexual violence. This study analyzes the association between household sanitation access and past year victimization from non-marital sexual violence (NMSV) in India.MethodsWe analyzed 74,698 women age 15-49 from whom information on NMSV was collected in India's National Family Health Survey 2015-16 (NFHS-4). We used multivariable logistic regression to test the relationship between women's household sanitation access and recent NMSV experience, controlling for socioeconomics (SES;e.g., age, marital st...
Emerging evidence demonstrates how inadequate access to water and sanitation is linked to psychosoci...
While sanitation interventions have focused primarily on child health, women's unique health risks f...
Female bargaining power in rural Haryana, as in much of northern India, is constrained by widespread...
BackgroundLack of household sanitation, specifically toilet facilities, can adversely affect the saf...
Abstract Background Globally, one in ten individuals ...
Abstract We provide the first comprehensive analysis of the association between two key household re...
In India out of the 246,692,667 households there are 53.1% having no latrines. Similarly in the urba...
This paper is based on study of SHARE Research Consortium and the Water Supply and Sanitation Collab...
Without adequate sanitation facilities, environmental, social, and health risks are common and worse...
By the end of the Millennium Development Goal’s target year, 2015, India had been declared as a coun...
Lack of access to acceptable sanitation facilities can expose individuals, particularly women, to ph...
It has long been acknowledged that many aspects of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) are highly ...
Given the scope of its consequences, it's no wonder that violence against women is recognized as a m...
BACKGROUND: While women and girls face special risks from lack of access to sanitation facilities, t...
In 2017, the Joint Monitoring Programme estimated that 520 million people in India were defecating i...
Emerging evidence demonstrates how inadequate access to water and sanitation is linked to psychosoci...
While sanitation interventions have focused primarily on child health, women's unique health risks f...
Female bargaining power in rural Haryana, as in much of northern India, is constrained by widespread...
BackgroundLack of household sanitation, specifically toilet facilities, can adversely affect the saf...
Abstract Background Globally, one in ten individuals ...
Abstract We provide the first comprehensive analysis of the association between two key household re...
In India out of the 246,692,667 households there are 53.1% having no latrines. Similarly in the urba...
This paper is based on study of SHARE Research Consortium and the Water Supply and Sanitation Collab...
Without adequate sanitation facilities, environmental, social, and health risks are common and worse...
By the end of the Millennium Development Goal’s target year, 2015, India had been declared as a coun...
Lack of access to acceptable sanitation facilities can expose individuals, particularly women, to ph...
It has long been acknowledged that many aspects of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) are highly ...
Given the scope of its consequences, it's no wonder that violence against women is recognized as a m...
BACKGROUND: While women and girls face special risks from lack of access to sanitation facilities, t...
In 2017, the Joint Monitoring Programme estimated that 520 million people in India were defecating i...
Emerging evidence demonstrates how inadequate access to water and sanitation is linked to psychosoci...
While sanitation interventions have focused primarily on child health, women's unique health risks f...
Female bargaining power in rural Haryana, as in much of northern India, is constrained by widespread...