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Water Supply

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Water Supply & Sanitation. and. HIV/AIDS. Ann Smith. HIV Support Section. Al Dutton. Humanitarian Section. EMERGENCIES. Unaccompanied children & young people ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water Supply


1
Water Supply Sanitationand HIV/AIDS
  • Ann Smith
  • HIV Support Section
  • Al Dutton
  • Humanitarian Section

2
HIV VULNERABILITY/DISCRIMINATION
Loss of income/means of support
Loss of Education
Unaccompanied children young people
Emergency response
Loss of Health Care
Increased Powerlessness All people affected
gender-related
Emergency response
Imported military presence
Displacement Migration
Emergency response
Breakdown in social cultural structures
Loss of homes, food, sanitation
Sexual violence and abuse
EMERGENCIES
NATURAL DISASTERS CONFLICTS/WARS
Political Economic Discrimination Poverty Poli
tical instability Orchestrated Violence
Feuding Factions Environmental Climatic
Problems
3
  • Lost livelihood, education, health care, shelter,
    food, sanitation
  • Increased powerlessness general/gender
  • Unaccompanied children
  • Displacement and Migration
  • Increased Poverty
  • Military presence/mobilisation
  • Economic/ political instability

Acute Rehab Emergency response
Emergency
HIV/AIDS
Acute Emergency response
  • Lost livelihood, education, financial and
    material reserves
  • Reduced economic/agricultural productivity
  • Increased powerlessness general/gender
  • Unaccompanied children
  • Displacement and Migration
  • Increased Poverty
  • Economic/political instability

4
The policies and practices of ALL who exercise
power in emergencies can affect this cycle
  • Governments, local, national and international
  • Combatants/Military/Peacekeeping Forces
  • Humanitarian aid workers, local, INGOs and UN
    agencies
  • Emergencies occurring against a backdrop of high
    HIV prevalence challenge all response groups to
    revise their hitherto accepted mode of response

5
Analysing the interconnectedness of Emergencies
and HIV/AIDS Key Questions for Practitioners
  • Which people are made more vulnerable to HIV by
    the current emergency and how?
  • How does the current emergency affect the
    wellbeing of people already infected with HIV?
  • How does HIV/AIDS affect the current emergency
    and post-emergency rehabilitation?
  • What are the implications for humanitarian aid
    practitioners?

Emergencys effect on HIV vulnerability
Emergencys effect on people with HIV/AIDS
HIVs effect on emergency
Consequences for policy and practice
6
Re. Water and Sanitation and HIV/AIDS
  • Question 1-HIV vulnerability Which people?
  • Women, young girls, young boys
  • Water-sanitation providers/supervisors
  • Question 1-HIV vulnerability How?
  • Sexual violence
  • Sexual Bartering/coercion
  • Survival sex

7
Re. Water and Sanitation and HIV/AIDS
  • Question 2 How does the emergency affect people
    with HIV or AIDS?
  • General escalation of infectious diseases because
    of poor/no sanitation and increased pathogens in
    water.
  • Inability of families affected by HIV to maintain
    good infection control standards, to adhere to
    water-based treatment regimes or to sustain
    desirable levels of personal hygiene
  • Consequently a more rapid health deterioration
    among children and adults with HIV or AIDS.

8
Re. Water and Sanitation and HIV/AIDS
  • Question 3 How do HIV and AIDS affect emergency
    and rehabilitation responses?
  • Reduced ability to cope of families affected by
    HIV because their reserves are already depleted.
    Thus family and community recovery may take
    longer.
  • Families with sick adults cannot e.g. construct
    their own latrines, participate in food/cash for
    work etc. Grandparents have skills but are too
    frail. Children lack skills and strength.
  • Sick family members cannot walk long distances to
    water supply or toilet facilities
  • Child-headed households resulting from AIDS
  • May not be able to carry larger water
    rations/operate heavy machinery for pumping water
    etc
  • May not be counted in needs assessment surveys

9
Re. Water and Sanitation and HIV/AIDS
  • Question 4 What are the implications for
    humanitarian aid practitioners?
  • Ration sizes may vary, e.g. families with sick
    members might need more water for washing
  • Water quality more critical for
    immune-compromised people
  • Location of, supervision at, water distribution
    points, washing facilities toilets (security
    from sexual violence
  • -e.g. well-lit single-sex toilets located
    centrally not peripherally- easy access for
    sick people)
  • Programmes administered by women men
  • Families ability to cope is reduced, e.g.
    smaller water containers, collective labour,
    reduced skills
  • Priority target groups may be different e.g. may
    include families with sick members, child-headed
    households, single women, unaccompanied children
  • Increased training/skills and support needs of
    practitioners because of HIV

10
www.odihpn.org -download hpn_at_odi.org.uk
-reprints
www.cafod.org.uk Hqcafod_at_cafod.org.uk
11
www.sphereproject.org
12
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