ECONOMIC BENEFITS FROM WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE PROMOTION - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ECONOMIC BENEFITS FROM WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE PROMOTION

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Presentation at Annual Seminar for District Directors of Health ... IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre. Kampala, 25 May 2006. Content overview ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECONOMIC BENEFITS FROM WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE PROMOTION


1
ECONOMIC BENEFITS FROM WATER, SANITATION AND
HYGIENE PROMOTION
  • Presentation at Annual Seminar for District
    Directors of Health Services, Uganda
  • Jo Smet
  • IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre
  • Kampala, 25 May 2006

2
Content overview
  • Dar es Salaam, 1982
  • Hygiene improvement framework
  • Barriers of water/sanitation disease transmission
  • Measuring cost effectiveness
  • Effectiveness WASH interventions
  • Cost benefit for water and sanitation
  • Economic benefits WASH
  • WASH and livelihoods
  • Some cost effective WASH approaches

3
Hygiene Improvement Framework
WSSSC, 2005
4
Disease transmission and control
5
Latrine as disease barrier
6
Effects of different WASH interventions
7
Example of overview of WASH impact studies
8
Measuring effectiveness of WASH
  • Cost effectiveness analysis show which
    interventions in a particular sector are most
    beneficial
  • Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALY) estimations
    widely used in health sector to determine cost
    effectiveness
  • DALY method measures reduction in morbidity and
    mortality from specific intervention
  • Effectiveness is expressed as amount spent (US)
    per case of illness averted, death averted and
    averted DALY
  • Most WASH programmes do NOT measure cost
    effectiveness yet!
  • The use of DALY for WASH is not recommended
    non-health benefits are NOT considered, and WASH
    has delayed effects

9
WASH and DALY
  • WHO data on the burden of disease shows that
    approximately 3.1 of deaths (1.7 million) and
    3.7 of
  • disability-adjusted-life-years (DALYs) (54.2
    million) worldwide are attributable to unsafe
    water, sanitation
  • and hygiene.
  • In Africa 4 8 of all disease burden is
    attributable to unsafe WASH.
  • Over 99.8 of all the deaths attributable to
    these factors occur in developing countries and
    90 are deaths of children

10
DALY of Hygiene Promotion versus other health
interventions
  • A recent report states
  • adding hygiene promotion is particularly
    efficient and effective in reducing morbidity and
    mortality from child diarrhoea
  • a 1996 study
  • USD21 per DALY saved through Hygiene Promotion
  • against USD 24 for oral rehydration therapy
  • and USD15 35 for expanded immunization

11
WASH generating economic benefits
  • Each 1 invested in WASH would yield an economic
    return of between 3 and 34 (depending on
    region) (WHO)
  • Households with improved WASH services suffer
    less morbidity and mortality from water- and
    sanitation-related diseases. Global figure 10
    reduction in diarrhoeal episodes. Health-related
    cost reduction 7.3 billion/year
  • WASH services close to home significant time
    savings
  • WASH at home and schools more educational
    opportunities for women and girls

12
WASH generating economic benefits (more)
  • WASH creates new economic, productive
    opportunities extra household income may result
    in better health
  • Better WASH services may remove a barrier for
    tourism development

13
The cost of inaction!
  • Some examples only
  • 1992 cholera outbreak in Peru due to poor
    sanitation and inadequate disinfection of
    drinking water.
  • Loss 34 GNP due to drop in tourism and fish
    exports.
  • Plus US 1 billion due to lost income and
    additional health costs this is 10x national
    budget on water supply and sanitation (WHO et al,
    2004)
  • 2005 cholera outbreak in Iran.
  • Government ban on growing and selling green
    vegetables cost local farmers at least US 55.5
    million (Source Weekly, 7 Sept 2005)
  • Sewage-polluted seas
  • health impact on bathers and shellfish eaters
    approx. US 12-24 billion/year (WHO et al, 2004)

14
Cost-benefit ratios for water sanitation
investment
  • Cost benefit ratios for water and sanitation
    investment in WHO sub-region 2 (AFR-E) for
    different interventions

Adapted from Hutton and Haller, 2004
15
Types of interventions
  • African countries with very high adult, high
    child mortality, .i.e.
  • Botswana, Burundi, Central African Republic,
    Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the
    Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi,
    Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa,
    Swaziland, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania,
    Zambia, Zimbabwe.
  • Interventions
  • ? Intervention 1- Millennium targets halving the
    proportion of people who do not have access to
    improved water sources by 2015, with priority
    given to those already with improved sanitation.
  • ? Intervention 2 - Millennium targets with
    sanitation targets halving the proportion of
    people who do not have access to improved water
    sources and improved sanitation facilities, by
    2015.
  • ? Intervention 3 - Access for all to improved
    water and improved sanitation.
  • ? Intervention 4 - A minimum of water disinfected
    at the point of use for all, on top of improved
    water and sanitation services.
  • ? Intervention 5- Access for all to a regulated
    piped water supply and sewage connection into
    their houses.

16
Cost Benefit ratio for sanitation
  • Cost-benefit ratio for sanitation using
    pessimistic and optimistic scenarios Adapted
    from ERM, 2005

17
WASH and livelihoods cycles
Improved WASH conditions
Better health and physical fitness for work
Economic productivity enhanced
Upgrade of Immediate environment
18
Direct and indirect economic benefits from
diarrhoeal disease reduction
Source Hutton and Haller, 2004, 17
19
Sanitation and livelihoods potentials
  • The potentials for improved Livelihoods through
    affordable, safe and sustainable sanitation
  • ? Better health from safe disposal of pathogenic
    human waste
  • ? Better crops from applying decomposed human
    waste rich in nutrients on fields
  • ? Better nutritional status of family members
    from better harvests
  • ? More income from excess harvest used for food
    and well-being
  • ? Better harvest because less sick days and so
    more productive days
  • ? Less expenditure on hospital/doctors visits
    and medicine
  • Better education and career future because less
    sick days at school
  • (Borba and Smet, forthcoming)

20
EcoSan Human waste as a resource
Source Werner, 2003 (GTZ-EcoSan)
21
ArborLoo and Manure use
22
EcoSan-economic benefits
  • Provision of valuable nutrients (N, P, K), mostly
    from urine (80 of nitrogen, 55 of phosphorus
    and 60 of potassium)
  • for rural and urban agriculture, forestry and
    aquaculture
  • many farmers can often not afford fertilisers
  • availability of fertilisers at the local market
    is low, and
  • world reserve of phosphorous appears to be
    diminishing (50 yrs)
  • ? Through the use of human waste in agriculture
    farmers income increases and so the livelihood
    of poor people including their health
  • ? Overcoming the high demand for water to flush
    human waste particularly important in areas with
    scarcity of water EcoSan may save 20-40 of the
    domestic water consumption
  • ? Health cost reduction as less microbiological
    contamination of ground/surface waters, the
    sources for drinking water, and stop to the
    pollution of surface water causing eutrophication
    and nitrate poisoning of the groundwater.
  • Biogas from human waste (and other waste sources)
    is cost-effective energy source

23
Some cost effective approaches
  • School sanitation and hygiene promotion
  • Total sanitation approaches
  • Ecological sanitation
  • Household centred environmental sanitation
  • See website Uganda WATSAN Resource Centre
    www.watsanuganda.watsan.net
  • And IRC, WSP, WSSCC, WELL, etc.

24
Conclusions
  • WASH is a basic requirement for health (and well
    being)
  • WASH interventions show high cost effectiveness
  • WASH interventions are long-term investments
    managed by households and communities
  • District health sector to find balance between
    curative and preventive health measures such as
    WASH also for reasons of cost-effectiveness
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