03931nam 22005773u 450 991045992670332120210107223848.092-4-069387-4(CKB)3710000000370191(EBL)1975014(MiAaPQ)EBC1975014(Au-PeEL)EBL1975014(OCoLC)904517810(EXLCZ)99371000000037019120150309d2014|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierPreventing Diarrhoea through Better Water Sanitation and Hygiene[electronic resource] Exposures and Impacts in Low- and Middle-income CountriesGeneva World Health Organization20141 online resource (47 p.)Description based upon print version of record.92-4-156482-2 Cover; Contents; Acronyms and abbreviations; Acknowledgements; Foreword; Executive summary; Methods; Exposures; Impacts of interventions; Global burden of disease; Section 1. Introduction; 1.1 Disease burden methodology; 1.1.1 Exposure distribution in the population; 1.1.2 Exposure-response relationship; 1.2 Report structure; Section 2. Drinking-water; 2.1 Global access to drinking-water supplies; 2.2 Faecal contamination of drinking-water supplies; 2.3 Household water treatment; 2.4 Drinking-water supplies used in LMICs2.5 Effect of improvements in drinking-water supply on diarrhoeal disease risk2.6 Burden of diarrhoeal disease from inadequate drinking-water; 2.7 Policy implications; Section 3. Sanitation; 3.1 Global sanitation practices; 3.2 Sanitation facilities used in LMICs; 3.3 Effect of improvements in sanitation on diarrhoeal disease risk; 3.4 Burden of diarrhoeal disease from inadequate sanitation; 3.5 Policy implications; Section 4. Handwashing; 4.1 Global practices of handwashing with soap; 4.2 Effect of handwashing with soap on diarrhoeal disease risk4.3 Burden of disease from inadequate handwashing4.4 Policy implications; Section 5. Integrated water, sanitation and hygiene interventions; 5.1 Burden of diarrhoeal disease from inadequate water, sanitation and hygiene; Section 6. Trends, other estimates and non-diarrhoeal WASH-related illness; 6.1 Trends since 1990; 6.2 Comparison with previous estimates of diarrhoea attributable to inadequate WASH; 6.3 Impact on diseases other than diarrhoea; 6.4 Policy implications; Annex; Country data on water-, sanitation- and hygiene-related exposure and disease burden; MethodologyNotes to Annex Table 2ReferencesIn early 2013 WHO convened an expert group of scientists from 14 collaborating research institutions to update theassessment of the burden of diarrhoeal disease from inadequate water sanitation and hygiene (WASH) and to reassessthe effectiveness of WASH interventions. This group considered evolving and alternative methods for assessing theburden of disease and agreed on a rigorous new approach using meta-regression. In deriving the new figures theexperts incorporated the latest data on use of improved water and sanitation with minor adjustments and drew uponthe results from two new global DiarrheaEnvironmental healthPublic healthSanitationWater sanitationElectronic books.Diarrhea.Environmental health.Public health.Sanitation.Water sanitation.363.73615.9Organization World Health819556AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910459926703321Preventing Diarrhoea through Better Water Sanitation and Hygiene2484269UNINA