1 / 21

Part 1 IWRM and Health

Part 1 IWRM and Health. Water management practices and health economics. The legacy of the Brundtland years. Health high on the international political agenda, with a consistent focus on ill-health-poverty links

kipp
Télécharger la présentation

Part 1 IWRM and Health

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Part 1IWRM and Health Water management practices and health economics

  2. The legacy of the Brundtland years • Health high on the international political agenda, with a consistent focus on ill-health-poverty links • WHO Commission on Macro-economics and Health: safe water and adequate sanitation among the most cost-effective interventions for lasting health gains • Combined GDP of countries in sub-Saharan Africa would be US$100 billion more had malaria been effectively controlled 40 years ago

  3. Some perspectives on water, poverty and health Africa South of the Sahara has 10% of the global population, yet 24% of the global burden of disease linked to environmental health determinants Water supply and sanitation coverage reaches just over half the population; 60% of the rural population lacks both In 2000, communicable diseases constitute the single largest category in terms of DALYs lost: 73.2% up from 65.9 in 1990

  4. Some perspectives on water, poverty and health The 2000 Burden of Disease estimates related to Environmental Health determinants stand at 103 million DALYs lost (29% of total) Further analysis by income group suggests that 55% of this burden affects the poorest fifth of the population, and that of this segment, 81% accrues to the rural poor

  5. A clustered approach to reducing the environmental health risks to which the poor are exposed can accelerate a reduction in their burden of disease The Top Three Environmental Health-related Burden of Disease clusters are Total EH BoD in Mn of DALYs lost Total pop. Poorest 1/5 Vector-borne diseases 40.9 25.1 Water-related diseases 25.8 14.3 Respiratory infections 24.6 13.5

  6. A clustered approach to reducing the environmental health risks to which the poor are exposed can accelerate a reduction in their burden of disease The challenges: • To effectively include health as a parameter in decision making in IWRM • To strengthen environmental health component of health sector programmes so they have capacity to respond to the needs in IWRM • To establish cross-sectoral compatibility in terms of boundaries, scale and level of decision-making • For professionals to learn to understand each other’s language and to trust and respect professionals from other disciplinary backgrounds in an open dialogue

  7. A combination of Burden of Disease estimates and cost-effectiveness analyses can differentiate those water supply and sanitation interventions that give poor largest incremental health gains for least possible costs. Recent WHO analyses to attribute a disease burden to water, sanitation and hygiene risk factors show they account for: • 2.1 million deaths each year (3.9% of total) • 76 million DALYs lost each year (5.3% of total)

  8. A combination of Burden of Disease estimates and cost-effectiveness analyses can differentiate those water supply and sanitation interventions that give the poor largest incremental health gains for least possible costs. Maximum health gains in absolute terms: • provide the most basic water supply services to those who have no access at all • provide water supply and sewage connection to individual households Most cost-effective interventions: • Disinfection at point-of-use through chlorine treatment and safe storage vessels combined with limited hygiene education • Targeting key behavioural change (hand washing)

  9. Annual funding per intervention world-wide (billions of US$)

  10. Costs of interventions versus healthy life years gained

  11. A combination of Burden of Disease estimates and cost-effectiveness analyses can differentiate those water supply and sanitation interventions that give the poor largest incremental health gains for least possible costs. The challenges: • IWRM should always have a Water Supply and Sanitation component • Burden of Disease and Cost-effectiveness criteria need to be included in the decision-making about water supply and sanitation and in IWRM • Water supply and sanitation projects need to have a component that documents Burden of Disease reduction and health gains

  12. A significant part of the burden of disease of poor, vulnerable communities can be attributed to the way we develop water resources and manage them.

  13. A significant part of the burden of disease of poor, vulnerable communities can be attributed to the way we develop water resources and manage them. • Ethiopia, Tigray: micro dams cause a seven-fold intensification of malaria transmission intensity • Senegal, Richard Toll: irrigated rice and sugar cane schemes cause the intestinal schistosomiasis prevalence rate to explode from 0 to 90% • Sri Lanka, Mahaweli System H: Japanese encephalitis outbreaks due to irrigation extension combined with pig rearing

  14. A significant part of the burden of disease of poor, vulnerable communities can be attributed to the way we develop water resources and manage them. • Environmental management measures for health protection and promotion are a cost-effective option provided they are included at the planning and design stage • Environmental modification capital intensive, lasting infrastructure works • Environmental manipulation recurrent environmental management activities with a potential for community participation

  15. A significant part of the burden of disease of poor, vulnerable communities can be attributed to the way we develop water resources and manage them. Environmental management: • design options at zero extra costs (e.g. larger diameter of outlets in dams) • operational options at zero extra costs (e.g. flushing, reservoir management) • options with dual benefits (e.g. alternate wetting and drying as part of rice irrigation practice: improved yields, less vectors, less methane) • capital investment in structural improvements (e.g. self-draining hydraulic structures, canal-lining, double spillways for dams)

  16. A significant part of the burden of disease of poor, vulnerable communities can be attributed to the way we develop water resources and manage them. The challenges: • Include training on environmental management for health in curricula of water professionals • Promote best practice in integrated planning and management of water resources (cf. World Commission on Dams) • Convince finance ministries that including health safeguards in water resources development projects is sound economics • Mobilise NGOs to adopt similar procedures strategically into their development activities

  17. A review of water resources sector policies and programmes can help identify opportunities to improve the health status of vulnerable communities.

  18. A review of water resources sector policies and programmes can help identify opportunities to improve health status of vulnerable communities. Ethiopia’s Water Sector Development Programme – By 2016: Water supply : Urban coverage increase 74 to 98% Rural water supply coverage from 23 to 71%. Irrigation : Small scale irrigation adds ~ 127,000 ha. to current 200,000 ha. Remaining expansion ~ 147,000 ha. will be medium and large scale. Hydropower : Six medium-scale, 15 small-scale hydropower plants completed; 63 medium-scale, 67 small-scale hydropower plants under development.

  19. A review of water resources sector policies and programmes can help identify opportunities to improve the health status of vulnerable communities. Ethiopia’s Water Sector Development Programme An estimated US$7.5 billion will be needed over the next 15 years to achieve the objectives contained in the programme. The breakdown by sub-sector is : water supply and sewerage extension 39% hydropower capacity development 26% irrigation development 23% water resources management 9% institution/capacity building 3%

  20. A review of water resources sector policies and programmes can help identify opportunities to improve the health status of vulnerable communities. The challenges: • Use policy and programme development in the water sector as an opportunity for capacity building in integrated thinking • Educate sectoral ministries that time invested in policy reviews for health is time well-invested

  21. Part 3IWRM and Health End – Part 3

More Related