Estimating the changing burden of disease attributable to unsafe water and lack of sanitation and hygiene in South Africa for 2000, 2006 and 2012.

IF 1.2
N Nannan, I Neethling, A Cois, R Laubscher, E B Turawa, R Pacella, D Bradshaw, V Pillay-van Wyk
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The incidence of diarrhoeal disease is closely linked to socioeconomic and environmental factors, household practices and access to health services. South African (SA) district health information and national survey data report wide variation in the incidence and prevalence of diarrhoeal episodes in children under 5 years of age. These differentials indicate potential for reducing the disease burden through improvements in provision of water and sanitation services and changes in hygiene behaviour.

Objectives: To estimate the burden of disease attributed to unsafe water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) by province, sex and age group for SA in 2000, 2006 and 2012.

Methods: Comparative risk assessment methodology was used to estimate the disease burden attributable to an exposure by comparing the observed risk factor distribution with a theoretical lowest possible population distribution. The study adapts the original World Health Organization scenario-based approach for estimating diarrhoeal disease burden from unsafe WASH, by assigning different standards of household water and sanitation-specific geographical classification to capture SA living conditions in rural, urban and informal settlements.

Results: SA experienced an improvement in water and sanitation supply in eight of the nine provinces between 2001 and 2011, with the exception of Northern Cape Province. In 2011, 41% of South Africans lived with poor water and sanitation conditions; however, wide provincial inequalities exist. In 2012, it was estimated that 84.1% of all deaths due to diarrhoeal disease were attributable to unsafe WASH; this equates to 13 757 deaths (95% uncertainty interval (UI) 13 015 - 14 300). Of these diarrhoeal disease deaths, 48.2% occurred in children under 5 years of age, accounting for 13.9% of all deaths in this age group (95% UI 13.1 - 14.4). Between 2000 and 2012, the proportion of deaths attributable to diarrhoea reduced from 3.6% to 2.6%. Gauteng and Western Cape provinces experienced much lower WASHattributable death rates than the more rural, poorer provinces.

Conclusion: Unsafe WASH remains an important risk factor for disease in SA, especially in children. High priority needs to be given to the provision of safe and sustainable sanitation and water facilities and promoting safe hygiene behaviours. The COVID-19 pandemic has reinforced the critical importance of clean water for preventing and containing disease.

估计2000年、2006年和2012年南非因不安全饮用水和缺乏环境卫生和个人卫生造成的疾病负担的变化。
背景:腹泻病的发病率与社会经济和环境因素、家庭习惯和获得保健服务的机会密切相关。南非地区卫生信息和全国调查数据显示,5岁以下儿童腹泻的发病率和流行率差异很大。这些差别表明,通过改善提供水和环境卫生服务以及改变个人卫生行为,有可能减轻疾病负担。目的:按省、性别和年龄组估计2000年、2006年和2012年南南非地区不安全饮用水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)造成的疾病负担。方法:采用比较风险评估方法,通过将观察到的危险因素分布与理论最低可能人群分布进行比较,估计暴露导致的疾病负担。该研究调整了世界卫生组织原来的基于情景的方法,用于估计不安全的讲卫生运动造成的腹泻疾病负担,方法是分配不同的家庭用水标准和特定于卫生设施的地理分类,以捕捉农村、城市和非正式住区的生活条件。结果:2001年至2011年期间,南非9个省中有8个省的水和卫生设施供应有所改善,北开普省除外。2011年,41%的南非人生活在恶劣的水和卫生条件下;然而,各省之间存在着广泛的不平等。2012年,估计84.1%的腹泻病死亡可归因于不安全的讲卫生运动;这相当于13 757人死亡(95%不确定区间13 015 - 14 300)。在这些腹泻病死亡中,48.2%发生在5岁以下儿童中,占该年龄组死亡总数的13.9% (95% UI 13.1 - 14.4)。2000年至2012年期间,腹泻导致的死亡比例从3.6%降至2.6%。豪登省和西开普省的wash死亡率远低于农村和较贫穷的省份。结论:不安全的WASH仍然是SA发病的重要危险因素,尤其是儿童。必须高度优先重视提供安全和可持续的环境卫生和供水设施以及促进安全的个人卫生行为。2019冠状病毒病大流行凸显了清洁水对于预防和控制疾病的至关重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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