No-Plumbing Disease


Jan 16th, 2009 5:31 PM EST
By Margaret McDonnell

Check out this great post from our friends at Water Advocates!

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Image by Kimberly Cadena

A few days ago at a DC-style networking session for public health folks, I introduced myself as the Communications Director for Water Advocates.

I am used to receiving surprised- even shocked- expressions when people learn that poor sanitation and unsafe water cause the illnesses that fill half of the hospital beds in the developing world and 10 percent of the entire global disease burden, even if I am amidst the public health folks of the world.

Yet, without missing a beat, the doctor who organized the event spoke up: “You must know that plumbing was the biggest contribution to improving public health in history.”

Yes!! I exclaimed, overjoyed to finally meet a medical doctor who understands that plumbing is the best way to save lives.

He was referring to the fact that when developed countries like the US, Japan, and England installed water and sanitation systems, they eradicated diseases like cholera and typhoid that caused death by diarrhea. Plumbing has saved millions of lives- our lives.

Still, billions of people in the world don’t have access to safe drinking water or a place to dispose their feces. 1.5 million children subsequently die every year.

We hear public outcries–in national news headlines, through savvy leadership, and championed by celebrity spokespeople–on many poverty-related diseases that are more costly to prevent, cannot yet be treated, or kill fewer people.

When such a simple, cheap, tried-and-true public health intervention is so present in our lives–and could prevent the astronomical death toll–why am I still surprised when people know about it?

Blame it on the name.

There are over 25 diseases (deadly and debilitating) that are the result of poor sanitation and unsafe water. These include cholera, typhoid, amoebic dysentery, campylobacter enteritis, giardia, Guinea worm, schistosomiasis, bacillary dysentery (shigellosis), Escherichia Coli diarrhea. And there are at least 10 lesser known ones.

Perhaps if we considered these as one disease it would garner the public outcry it deserves. Let’s call it No-Plumbing Disease.

We would then see that No-Plumbing Disease kills more children than HIV/AIDS, malaria, and TB combined. We would see the truth of this ugly situation; the relentless outbreaks of diarrhea that, when they don’t kill kids, weaken them month after month- the instances of a single child, for example, suffering a dozen bouts of it per year, the ensuing malnutrition, the family’s economic burden of curing the child, the impact this constant sickness has on a child’s education.

The most practical investment we can make in global public health is plumbing.

Of course, plumbing is an oversimplified way of talking about solutions for improving water and sanitation. Many of the existing solutions are simple basic infrastructure, such as a ceramic water filter or a pit latrine. And we need to be more environmentally minded as we develop these systems.

But the main point remains: dirty water and lack of sanitation cause No-Plumbing Disease. The solutions exist right now to solve this crisis. Call it what it is, and give it the attention it rightfully deserves. We will save millions of lives each year.

-John Sauer and Katryn Bowe, Water Advocates

TAGS: NGO Partner, Policy News, Water Advocates, Water and Sanitation

 

  1. Wini Atlassays: Jan 17th, 2009 4:20 PM EST

    January 17, 2009 at 4:20 pm

    I found this piece to be very provocative. As someone interested in global poverty, I well know the importance of clean water. It’s mentioned very often. As a nurse, though, I even more aware of good sanitation. Just envision what your own home would be like without a toilet to put your waste products in and no sewer pipes of septic system to dispose of it. What would you do? How much of your time would you have to spend to keep the waste from contaminating your own water and food supplies and from contaminating the ground water, the streams and the rivers that carry waste from place to the next? If there were no water treatment and sewage treatment plants we’d all have to do it ourselves. How soon would it take for the whole thing break down? Then we’d be facing those diseases that are mentioned above. I’d like to mention one additional thing. With good sewers, there is little standing water to breed mosquitoes. Fewer mosquitoes, less disease, here, there and everywhere. In the places where malaria and other mosquito-bourn diseases are endemic, lack of good sewers to carry away standing water to treatment plants also sharply increases the incidence of the such diseases. No-plumbing disease is a very apt term. I hope it comes into wide use and evinces the thoughts of horror at what the lack of clean water and good sewage removal and treatment bring to populations all over the world. I hope we remember the cascade of consequences, from morbidity and malnutrition to lack of education to impoverishment of families and to death, among many other consequences, as well. There are many other things that demand our attention but there are some relatively small and easy solutions that will help this problem so lets get behind the efforts to end No-plumbing Disease.

  2. Dunn Egginksays: Jan 19th, 2009 8:49 PM EST

    January 19, 2009 at 8:49 pm

    I appreciate Bono speaking out on behalf of the worlds poor and sick. Don’t forget that the number one question asked Obama was “Will you legalize marijuana?”. Think about the benefits that medical cannabis can have on the millions of suffering Africans. I am very disturbed when I hear that UN Police are using international aid money to persecute cannabis growers in Africa and destroy such an important beneficial crop. Bono has enormous influence on UN leaders, and some of the world’s most powerful people. Please don’t think for a moment that by removing cannabis the UN is in any way helping the poor people of Africa or any other continent. This is a grave injustice, and I’m sure the sick and dying Africans effected by such laws would agree. The cannabis plant can help to provide food, clothing, shelter, safe medicine, and eco-friendly fuel. If the One Campaign really wants to help the poor, we should let them grow hemp, and if we must get involved, help them succeed in taking advantage of the many benefits of the hemp industry.
    I hope Bono keeps up the good work, and helps to stop the bad work.
    Thanx. www.nycamp.org

  3. Campbell Castanedasays: Mar 4th, 2009 6:43 AM EST

    March 4, 2009 at 6:43 am

    uhm, you have to run exe, you retards. It wouldn

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