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International Year of Freshwater 2003 UN - UNESCO
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Facts and Figures: Water and Health
Water-related diseases are a growing human tragedy, killing more than 5 million people each year - 10 times the number of people killed in wars. About 2.3 billion people suffer from diseases linked to dirty water. Some 60% of all infant mortality worldwide is linked to infectious and parasitic diseases, most of them water-related.  
 
Adverse human health effects from water can be divided into four main categories:

Water-borne diseases

Those caused by water that has been contaminated by human, animal, or chemical wastes.

Water-borne diseases include cholera, typhoid, bacillary disentry, polio, meningitis, hepatitis A and E and diarrhoea, among others. These are diseases casued by dirty water, and most can be prevented by treating water before use.

    Diarrhoeal diseases

    Every day, diarrhoeal diseases cause some 6,000 deaths, mostly among children under five: in 2001, 1.96 million people died from infectious diarrhoeas; 1.3 million were children under five.
    Diarrhoeal diseases have killed more children in the past ten years than all the people lost to armed conflict since World War II.
    Between 1,085,000 and 2,187,000 deaths due to diarrhoeal diseases can be attributed to the 'water, sanitation and hygiene' risk factor, 90% of them among children under five.
    In China, India and Indonesia, twice as many people die from diarrhoeal diseases as from HIV/AIDS.
    With simple hygiene measures such as washing hands after using the toilet or before preparing food, most of these deaths are preventable.

Water-based diseases

Those caused by aquatic organisms that spend part of their life cycle in the water and another part as parasites of animals.

Water-based diseases include Guinea worm disease, filariasis (also a vector disease), paragonimiasis, clonorchiasis and schistosomiasis. These diseases are caused by a variety of flukes, tapeworms, roundworms and tissue nematodes, often referred to as helminths, that infect humans. Although these diseases are not usually fatal they prevent people from living normal lives and impair their ability to work.

The prevalence of water-based diseases often increases when dams are constructed, because stagnant water behind dams is ideal for snails, the intermediary host for many types of worms. For instance, the Akosombo Dam, on Volta Lake in Ghana and the Aswan High Dam on the Nile in Egypt have resulted in huge increases of schistosomiasis in these areas.
    Schistosomiasis (bilharzia)

    Of the 200 million people in the world infected with the worm that causes schistosomiasis, some 20 million suffer severe consequences, such as renal failure, bladder cancer, and liver fibrosis. The disease is still found in 74 countries.
    Studies show that the disease has been cut by 77% in some areas through providing better drinking water and sanitation access.
    88 million children under fifteen years of age are infected each year with schistosomes.
    80% of transmission takes place in Africa south of the Sahara.

Water-related vector diseases

Those transmitted by vectors, such as mosquitoes and tsetse flies, that breed or live in or near water.

Millions of people suffer from infections transmitted by these vectors, infections such as malaria, yellow fever, dengue fever, sleeping sickness and filariasis. Malaria, the most widespread, is endemic in 100 developing countries, putting some 2 billion people at risk. In sub-Saharan Africa alone, malaria costs an estimated $1.7 billion a year in treatment and lost productivity.

The incidence of these diseases appears to be increasing. There are many reasons: people are developing resistance to antimalarial drugs; mosquitoes are developing resistance to DDT, the major insecticide used; environmental changes are creating new breeding sites; and migration, climate change, and the creation of new habitats mean that fewer people build up natural immunity to these diseases.
    Malaria

    Over 1 million people die from malaria every year.
    About 90% of the annual global rate of deaths from malaria occur in Africa south of the Sahara.
    Malaria causes at least 300 million cases of acute illness each year.
    The disease costs Africa more than $12 million annually and slows economic growth in African countries by 1.3% a year.
    Sleeping under mosquito nets would be one simple but effective way to prevent many cases of malaria, especially for children under five.

Water-scarce diseases

Those diseases that thrive in conditions where freshwater is scarce and sanitation poor, such as trachoma and tuberculosis.

To serve the additional 5 billion people expected to live on the planet by the year 2050, sewerage facilities must be provided to 383,000 new customers a day.

These diseases are becoming rampant throughout the world. They can be controlled easily through better hygiene, but adequate supplies of clean freshwater must be available.

For more information on health visit the Water Library.




Information based on:
People and the Planet
UN World Water Development Report (WWDR)




The Year around the world: Discover what's happening in your country!


 Definitions
 Malaria
Transmitted by mosquitoes, malaria is characterized by extreme exhaustion associated with paroxysms of high fever
 Schistosomiasis
A disease caused by a worm that is often found in irrigation ditches and still river water.
 Publications
 Africa Malaria Report 2003

 ID: 1600 | guest (Read) Updated: 2003-07-21 2:25 pm - © 2003 - UNESCO - Contact