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Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Why waste water? in support of SDG 6.3 on improving water quality and reducing, treating and reusing wastewater

WHO | World Water Day 2017: Why waste water: "World Water Day, on 22 March every year, is about taking action to tackle the water crisis. Today, there are over 663 million people living without a safe water supply close to home, spending countless hours queuing or trekking to distant sources, and coping with the health impacts of using contaminated water. This year's theme: Why waste water? in support of SDG 6.3 on improving water quality and reducing, treating and reusing wastewater.

Globally, the vast majority of all the wastewater from our homes, cities, industry and agriculture flows back to nature without being treated or reused – polluting drinking and bathing and irrigation and losing valuable nutrients and other recoverable materials.

Reducing and safely treating and reusing wastewater, for example in agriculture and aquaculture, protects worker, farmers and consumers promotes food security, health and wellbeing."



Notes:

A significant amount of disease could be prevented through access to safe water supply, adequate sanitation services and better hygiene practices. Diarrhoeal disease alone amounts to an estimated 3.6 % of the total DALY global burden of disease and is responsible for the deaths of 1.5 million people every year (WHO 2012). It is estimated that 58% of that burden, or 842 000 deaths per year, is attributable to unsafe water supply, sanitation and hygiene and includes 361 000 deaths of children under age five, mostly in low-income countries (WHO 2014). Adequate WASH play a key role in preventing many more diseases, improving nutritional outcomes and for the provision of quality care in healthcare settings.
WHO quantifies the burden of diseases associated with poor WASH, works with scientists to obtain the most rigorous and relevant evidence on WASH and health; provide normative guidance based on a comprehensive health-risk based framework, and provide technical support on WASH in a number of areas including neglected tropical diseases, nutrition, maternal, newborn and child health, and emergencies.

Disease facts

842 000

Diarrhoeal diseases deaths per year resulting from lack of safe drinking-water and inadequate sanitation and hygiene

58%

Proportion of the total diarrhoeal deaths that could be averted through safe drinking-water, sanitation and hygiene

Further information on diseases and risks



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UN: PEACE VIGIL: AFRICA unites to tackle threat of polio

The Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) is led by national governments and spearheaded by the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), with the support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Since its launch at the World Health Assembly in 1988, the GPEI has reduced the global incidence of polio by more than 99%. The GPEI receives financial support from governments of countries affected by polio; private sector foundations, donor governments, multilateral organizations, private individuals, humanitarian and nongovernmental organizations and corporate partners.

Full list of contributors
Media contacts

Tarik Jasarević
World Health Organization
Mobile: +41 79 367 6241
Telephone: +41 22 791 5099
Email: jasarevict@who.int

Patrick Rose
UNICEF Dakar
Telephone: +221 786 380 250
Email: prose@unicef.org

Rod Curtis
UNICEF External Relations (in Borno, Nigeria)
Telephone: +1 917 618 7555
Email: rcurtis@unicef.org"



Read Article at: UN: PEACE VIGIL: AFRICA unites to tackle threat of polio: More than 190 000 polio vaccinators in 13 countries across west and central Africa will immunize more than 116 million children over the nex...

Global Ministerial Conference will highlight the need for an accelerated multisectoral response to TB in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals

“The Global Ministerial Conference will highlight the need for an accelerated multisectoral response to TB in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals,” said Dr Ren Minghui, Assistant Director-General HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Malaria and Neglected Tropical Diseases. “It will emphasize that global action against antimicrobial resistance must include optimized care, surveillance and research to address MDR-TB urgently”.

The Conference will inform the UN General Assembly high-level meeting on TB which will be held in 2018.

Media contacts

Christian Lindmeier
Communications Officer
Mobile: +41 79 500 65 52
Telephone: +41 22 791 19 48
Email: lindmeierch@who.int

Prudence Smith 
Communications Officer
Telephone: +41 22 791 4586
Mobile: +41 794 771 744
Email: smithp@who.int"




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