City
Epaper

3 in 10 people globally don't have basic handwashing facilities at home: Unicef

By IANS | Updated: October 16, 2021 14:35 IST

United Nations, Oct 16 Globally, around three in 10 people, or 2.3 billion, do not have handwashing facilities ...

Open in App

United Nations, Oct 16 Globally, around three in 10 people, or 2.3 billion, do not have handwashing facilities with water and soap available at home, the Unicef said.

The situation is worst in the least developed countries, with over six in 10 people without access to basic hand hygiene, the UN agency said in a fact sheet on Global Handwashing Day, which falls on October 15.

According to the latest estimates, two in five schools worldwide do not have basic hygiene services with water and soap, affecting 818 million students, of which 462 million attend schools with no facility at all.

In the least developed countries, seven out of 10 schools have no place for children to wash their hands.

One-third of health care facilities worldwide do not have hand hygiene facilities at points of care where the patient, health care worker, and treatment involve contact with the patient.

The latest data show that some progress has been made since 2015.

The global population with access to basic hand hygiene at home has increased from 5 billion to 5.5 billion, or from 67 per cent to 71 per cent.

However, if current trends persist, 1.9 billion people will still not have access to basic hand hygiene by the end of the decade.

The cost to provide hand hygiene in all homes in 46 of the world's least developed countries by 2030 is an estimated $11 billion.

"Global response efforts to the pandemic have created an unprecedented time for hand hygiene. Yet progress remains far too slow for the most vulnerable, underserved communities," Unicef WASH Director Kelly Ann Naylor was quoted as saying in a statement.

"Hand hygiene cannot be viewed as a temporary provision to manage Covid-19. Further long-term investment in water, sanitation and hygiene can help prevent the next health crisis from coming. It also means fewer people falling ill with respiratory infections, fewer children dying from diarrhoeal diseases, and more pregnant mothers and newborns protected from preventable conditions like sepsis."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Kelly ann naylorUnicefUnited NationsCentral relief fundState relief fundUnited nations children's fundUn children's fundUnited nations international children's emergency fundUnited nations organisationGeneral staff on facebookNav fund administration group
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUnited Nations Warns of Food Crisis in Zimbabwe After Drought Ravages Crops

InternationalNorthern Gaza Aid Deliveries Face New Hurdles As UN Warns of Shortages

InternationalInternational Yoga Day 2024: Global Yoga Gathering at UN To Promote Unity Through Ancient Practice

InternationalUnited Nation Chief Condemns Israeli Strike in Rafah, Says “Horror Must Stop”

InternationalUnited Nations Halts Food Distribution in Rafah Due to Lack of Supplies, Insecurity

Health Realted Stories

HealthTelangana’s first intestine transplant performed at Osmania Hospital

HealthHimachal takes steps to retain specialist doctors

HealthUganda declares end of Ebola outbreak

HealthScientists find cellular culprit behind age-related abdominal fat

HealthArmy Hospital performs its first minimally invasive glaucoma surgery