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At 732 Million, India Tops List on Number of People Without Access to sanitation: Report

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India, the world’s second-largest country by population, has the highest number of people (732 million) without access to sanitation, according to a new report.

The report by WaterAid, titled Out Of Order:The State of the World’s Sanitation 2017, further stated that 355 million women and girls lack access to a sanitation. If they were to stand in a line, the queue could circle the Earth more than four times.

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India’s low ranking on the sanitation index is despite the changes brought by the government’s Swachh Bharat (Clean India) Mission. Launched in October 2014, it increased the country’s sanitation coverage from 39% to 65% by November 2017, according to government data. In this period, 52 million household sanitation were built in rural India.

The cleanliness campaign has reduced the proportion of people defecating in the open by 40%, meaning more than 100 million people now use sanitation, according to the WaterAid report.

India also ranks sixth among the top ten nations working to reduce open defecation and improving access to basic sanitation. The percentage of population without access to at least basic sanitation fell from 78.3% in 2000 to 56% in 2015, according to the report.

Diarrhoeal diseases kill 60,700 Indian children each year

Each year, 60,700 children under five years die from diarrhoeal diseases, the WaterAid report said.

Diarrhoea remains the second leading cause of death in Indian children under five years, killing an estimated 321 children every day in 2015, as IndiaSpend reported on July 29, 2017, based on a World Health Organization factsheet.

Hookworms, which can spread through open defecation, cause diarrhoea, anaemia and weight loss in women, according to the report. These problems are linked to low birth weight and slow child growth – 38% of children in India under five are stunted, according to the National Family Health Survey, 2015-16, (NFHS-4) data.

Indian states with poor access to sanitation report high incidence of diarrhoeal diseases. Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Assam and Chhattisgarh had the highest rate of mortality among children under five years of age, higher stunting (low height-for-age) rates and higher prevalence of diarrhoea due to poor sanitation, as IndiaSpend reported on April 26, 2017, based on NFHS-4.

Screen-Shot-2017-11-16-at-11.26.31-AM.png


The tables above show the top five and bottom five states based on the percentage of households with improved sanitation, according to NFHS-4. States with higher percentage of improved sanitation have lower levels of anaemia among women (both pregnant and non-pregnant). These states also reported fewer cases of diarrhoea than the national average.

For example, Kerala, which had the highest percentage of households with improved sanitation (98.1%) – the national average was 48.4% – also had the lowest prevalence of diarrhoea (3.4%) and the lowest percentage of women with anaemia (22.6%).

Bihar, with only 25% households using improved sanitation, had the highest prevalence of diarrhoea (10.2%) and the highest percentage of anaemic pregnant women (58.3%).

For women, high risk of illiteracy, harassment

Apart from poor health, lack of sanitation means that more than 1.1 billion women and girls globally get limited education and face harassment. In rural India, high dropout rates and non-enrolment among girls can be attributed to absence of sanitation facilities, as IndiaSpend reported on July 19, 2017.

In rural India, 23% of girls have listed menstruation as the chief reason for dropping out of school. As many as 28% of them said they do not go to school during their period because they lack clean and affordable protection, as IndiaSpend reported on June 19, 2017.

Sanitation policies should cover the needs of those who are vulnerable, said Raman V.R., head of policy at WaterAid India.

“Adolescent girls and women want facilities in which they can manage their periods safely and hygienically,” he said. “Pregnant women need easily accessible and usable toilets, and the elderly or people with disability require toilets with design features that help overcome the physical constraints they typically face.”

Prachi Salve is an analyst at IndiaSpend.

https://thewire.in/health/732-million-india-tops-list-number-people-without-access-toilets-report

I am guessing this is a lie as well? 732 million don't have proper sanitation, but India is rich, India is safe for women and kids, India is great, India is awesome, India is beautiful.
 
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But , but , but the CEO of Google is Indian...

I’m sure all those CEOs would love to come to India.. oh wait they are living in USA and loving it.

Makes me wonder why Indians brag about their brain drain rather than what’s happening in their country.
 
. . .
2177987238_7bbebb0cd9_o.jpg


India, the world’s second-largest country by population, has the highest number of people (732 million) without access to sanitation, according to a new report.

The report by WaterAid, titled Out Of Order:The State of the World’s Sanitation 2017, further stated that 355 million women and girls lack access to a sanitation. If they were to stand in a line, the queue could circle the Earth more than four times.

Dashboard-1.png


India’s low ranking on the sanitation index is despite the changes brought by the government’s Swachh Bharat (Clean India) Mission. Launched in October 2014, it increased the country’s sanitation coverage from 39% to 65% by November 2017, according to government data. In this period, 52 million household sanitation were built in rural India.

The cleanliness campaign has reduced the proportion of people defecating in the open by 40%, meaning more than 100 million people now use sanitation, according to the WaterAid report.

India also ranks sixth among the top ten nations working to reduce open defecation and improving access to basic sanitation. The percentage of population without access to at least basic sanitation fell from 78.3% in 2000 to 56% in 2015, according to the report.

Diarrhoeal diseases kill 60,700 Indian children each year

Each year, 60,700 children under five years die from diarrhoeal diseases, the WaterAid report said.

Diarrhoea remains the second leading cause of death in Indian children under five years, killing an estimated 321 children every day in 2015, as IndiaSpend reported on July 29, 2017, based on a World Health Organization factsheet.

Hookworms, which can spread through open defecation, cause diarrhoea, anaemia and weight loss in women, according to the report. These problems are linked to low birth weight and slow child growth – 38% of children in India under five are stunted, according to the National Family Health Survey, 2015-16, (NFHS-4) data.

Indian states with poor access to sanitation report high incidence of diarrhoeal diseases. Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Assam and Chhattisgarh had the highest rate of mortality among children under five years of age, higher stunting (low height-for-age) rates and higher prevalence of diarrhoea due to poor sanitation, as IndiaSpend reported on April 26, 2017, based on NFHS-4.

Screen-Shot-2017-11-16-at-11.26.31-AM.png


The tables above show the top five and bottom five states based on the percentage of households with improved sanitation, according to NFHS-4. States with higher percentage of improved sanitation have lower levels of anaemia among women (both pregnant and non-pregnant). These states also reported fewer cases of diarrhoea than the national average.

For example, Kerala, which had the highest percentage of households with improved sanitation (98.1%) – the national average was 48.4% – also had the lowest prevalence of diarrhoea (3.4%) and the lowest percentage of women with anaemia (22.6%).

Bihar, with only 25% households using improved sanitation, had the highest prevalence of diarrhoea (10.2%) and the highest percentage of anaemic pregnant women (58.3%).

For women, high risk of illiteracy, harassment

Apart from poor health, lack of sanitation means that more than 1.1 billion women and girls globally get limited education and face harassment. In rural India, high dropout rates and non-enrolment among girls can be attributed to absence of sanitation facilities, as IndiaSpend reported on July 19, 2017.

In rural India, 23% of girls have listed menstruation as the chief reason for dropping out of school. As many as 28% of them said they do not go to school during their period because they lack clean and affordable protection, as IndiaSpend reported on June 19, 2017.

Sanitation policies should cover the needs of those who are vulnerable, said Raman V.R., head of policy at WaterAid India.

“Adolescent girls and women want facilities in which they can manage their periods safely and hygienically,” he said. “Pregnant women need easily accessible and usable toilets, and the elderly or people with disability require toilets with design features that help overcome the physical constraints they typically face.”

Prachi Salve is an analyst at IndiaSpend.

https://thewire.in/health/732-million-india-tops-list-number-people-without-access-toilets-report

I am guessing this is a lie as well? 732 million don't have proper sanitation, but India is rich, India is safe for women and kids, India is great, India is awesome, India is beautiful.

Mate you wont be getting any reply by any macho indian on this thread
 
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They are probably in the fields contemplating and lamenting on their next spot while doing their business.

They are busy being CEO's of multinational companies it doesn't matter these Indians who are CEO's of international companies left India because they could get a better education and have a better life in other countries.
 
. . .
They are busy being CEO's of multinational companies it doesn't matter these Indians who are CEO's of international companies left India because they could get a better education and have a better life in other countries.

Money worshipers who get to where they are based on homosexuality and networking. These so called corporations are just representations of extreme greed and extreme need floating on the lives of homelessness and poverty.
 
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Couple of things. Numbers you quoted are a little dated. Things are improving rapidly. The first phase of getting people to implement toilets in their houses is resulting in increased sanitation installations. The next phase is to make it accessible to everybody. Having said that, we are a decade away from visible changes, which will need a re-education program.
 
. . .
2177987238_7bbebb0cd9_o.jpg


India, the world’s second-largest country by population, has the highest number of people (732 million) without access to sanitation, according to a new report.

The report by WaterAid, titled Out Of Order:The State of the World’s Sanitation 2017, further stated that 355 million women and girls lack access to a sanitation. If they were to stand in a line, the queue could circle the Earth more than four times.

Dashboard-1.png


India’s low ranking on the sanitation index is despite the changes brought by the government’s Swachh Bharat (Clean India) Mission. Launched in October 2014, it increased the country’s sanitation coverage from 39% to 65% by November 2017, according to government data. In this period, 52 million household sanitation were built in rural India.

The cleanliness campaign has reduced the proportion of people defecating in the open by 40%, meaning more than 100 million people now use sanitation, according to the WaterAid report.

India also ranks sixth among the top ten nations working to reduce open defecation and improving access to basic sanitation. The percentage of population without access to at least basic sanitation fell from 78.3% in 2000 to 56% in 2015, according to the report.

Diarrhoeal diseases kill 60,700 Indian children each year

Each year, 60,700 children under five years die from diarrhoeal diseases, the WaterAid report said.

Diarrhoea remains the second leading cause of death in Indian children under five years, killing an estimated 321 children every day in 2015, as IndiaSpend reported on July 29, 2017, based on a World Health Organization factsheet.

Hookworms, which can spread through open defecation, cause diarrhoea, anaemia and weight loss in women, according to the report. These problems are linked to low birth weight and slow child growth – 38% of children in India under five are stunted, according to the National Family Health Survey, 2015-16, (NFHS-4) data.

Indian states with poor access to sanitation report high incidence of diarrhoeal diseases. Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Assam and Chhattisgarh had the highest rate of mortality among children under five years of age, higher stunting (low height-for-age) rates and higher prevalence of diarrhoea due to poor sanitation, as IndiaSpend reported on April 26, 2017, based on NFHS-4.

Screen-Shot-2017-11-16-at-11.26.31-AM.png


The tables above show the top five and bottom five states based on the percentage of households with improved sanitation, according to NFHS-4. States with higher percentage of improved sanitation have lower levels of anaemia among women (both pregnant and non-pregnant). These states also reported fewer cases of diarrhoea than the national average.

For example, Kerala, which had the highest percentage of households with improved sanitation (98.1%) – the national average was 48.4% – also had the lowest prevalence of diarrhoea (3.4%) and the lowest percentage of women with anaemia (22.6%).

Bihar, with only 25% households using improved sanitation, had the highest prevalence of diarrhoea (10.2%) and the highest percentage of anaemic pregnant women (58.3%).

For women, high risk of illiteracy, harassment

Apart from poor health, lack of sanitation means that more than 1.1 billion women and girls globally get limited education and face harassment. In rural India, high dropout rates and non-enrolment among girls can be attributed to absence of sanitation facilities, as IndiaSpend reported on July 19, 2017.

In rural India, 23% of girls have listed menstruation as the chief reason for dropping out of school. As many as 28% of them said they do not go to school during their period because they lack clean and affordable protection, as IndiaSpend reported on June 19, 2017.

Sanitation policies should cover the needs of those who are vulnerable, said Raman V.R., head of policy at WaterAid India.

“Adolescent girls and women want facilities in which they can manage their periods safely and hygienically,” he said. “Pregnant women need easily accessible and usable toilets, and the elderly or people with disability require toilets with design features that help overcome the physical constraints they typically face.”

Prachi Salve is an analyst at IndiaSpend.

https://thewire.in/health/732-million-india-tops-list-number-people-without-access-toilets-report

I am guessing this is a lie as well? 732 million don't have proper sanitation, but India is rich, India is safe for women and kids, India is great, India is awesome, India is beautiful.

The wire a third grade online magazine.
Report was in july 2017 ,more than one year ago and report was in nov 2017.
Lol
How can a bunch of Pakistanis knows about India?

But , but , but the CEO of Google is Indian...

I’m sure all those CEOs would love to come to India.. oh wait they are living in USA and loving it.

Makes me wonder why Indians brag about their brain drain rather than what’s happening in their country.

Love to see the jealousy ,frustration and desperation of Pakistanis
 
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but but India is fastest toilet building country
@Shamsher1990 please educate this illiterate anti india brainwashed ISI sponsored Jihadi/ Vatican mafia / rice bag agent
It is indeed.
This report contains figures from early 2015.

But , but , but the CEO of Google is Indian...

I’m sure all those CEOs would love to come to India.. oh wait they are living in USA and loving it.

Makes me wonder why Indians brag about their brain drain rather than what’s happening in their country.
You know, Pakistan is way more dependent upon her dispora outside Pakistan than India is. Ask @Indus Pakistan , what is keeping Pakistani economy afloat?
 
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