January 30, 2021

[Opinion Editorial] WASH and NTD Collaboration: No More Excuses

January 30, 2021

[Opinion Editorial] WASH and NTD Collaboration: No More Excuses

This World NTD Day, the Neglected Tropical Disease (NTD) community is further shining a light on the critical role that access to clean water and sanitation plays in the prevention of these illnesses. The just-launched World Health Organization (WHO) NTD road map is a clear indication that tides and times are changing, with a much needed focus being placed on the need for increased incorporation of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH). 

According to the CDC, 100 percent of low-income countries are simultaneously affected by at least five of the 20 parasitic, bacterial, viral and protozoan infections grouped together as NTDs, and 149 countries and territories are affected by at least one NTD. 1.7 billion people worldwide live with these diseases that deform bodies, blind and kill, disrupt children’s education, limit lifetime productivity; and ultimately traps families and communities in cycles of poverty that contribute to crippling economies. 

My Wellbeing Foundation Africa serves as an example of the powerful role that the facilitation of WASH plays in  successfully inhibiting all 20 NTDs; from outright prevention and effective treatment, to reducing prevalence of many more by between 33 to 70 percent (including intestinal worms which half a billion school children are at risk of.) Except… three billion people do not have access to water in their home. 900 million children go to schools without accessible handwashing facilities, and in the battlegrounds of disease itself, nearly 2 billion patients and healthcare staff must rely on healthcare facilities without water where care is provided. Sadly, access to WASH is that neglected.

I believe and continue to demonstrate that the solution for combatting NTD’s starts and ends with WASH – a message that the onset of the global pandemic successfully communicated to members of the NTD community. The global health focus must continue to shift from solely reflecting treatment as the primary solution, and embrace the power of prevention through WASH. The Covid-19 pandemic has caused policymakers, global health advocates and donors to step away from a culture that previously undermined the relationship between WASH and disease prevalence.

For a fifth year in a row, last year one billion people were treated for NTDs. While this is extraordinary outreach, it begs us to question how much of that suffering could have been prevented all together if children weren’t drinking intestinal worm-laden water and women weren’t irreversibly blinded at four times the rate of men by flies thriving in open waste? Despite excellent work being done to bring needed attention to these 20 diseases that attack the most vulnerable, and the efforts to get medications to them, the economic toll remains high and the human suffering remains devastating. 

This is no small problem and my country, Nigeria, is a case in point. 

According to WaterAid, 95 percent of healthcare centers in Nigeria are without basic WASH provisions, as well as 79 percent of all households. It is both alarming, and no surprise, that in a country where the majority of its citizens lack WASH and ranks first among nations in open defecation, half of its population—an estimated 100 million people—are at risk for at least one NTD. Nigeria carries 25 percent of Africa’s entire NTD burden. In 2013, the Federal Ministry of Health sought to reduce NTD morbidity and mortality, including by scaling-up WASH and other interventions—a step in the right direction. Guinea worm has been eliminated in Nigeria with a dramatic decline in three other NTDs (lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, and trachoma which causes irreversible blindness). But Nigerians are far from NTD-free and even farther from having the water and sanitation they deserve.

One of the goals of my organization, The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA), is to improve health outcomes for women, children, and infants. We are committed to improving and increasing access to WASH in healthcare facilities, schools and communities across Nigeria, in a bid  to reduce and eventually eradicate the prevalence of NTDs. WBFA’s team of midwives, in partnership with Unilever Lifebuoy Nigeria and Sightsavers, have reached more than two million children at-risk of NTDs, all while improving the education and hygiene practices. These school-based efforts reinforced in children, their families and communities the importance of prioritising WASH interventions, including handwashing with soap. 

The new WHO NTD road map is a much welcomed northern star. For the first time, there is a global target for WASH that countries must meet over the next 10 years – a solidified set of directions that will mark long-term change at each juncture. A companion strategy on integrating WASH will follow later this spring and making way for new collaboration calls for investments, programming and policies to assure universal and sustainable WASH coverage in NTD endemic areas, otherwise, we risk losing the gains made in reducing NTDs over this past decade and into the future. 

COVID-19 has ushered in greater understanding of the integral role WASH plays in public health. It is fair to say, that unacceptable WASH conditions not only fan the flames of COVID-19 where people cannot adequately wash their hands, they contribute to many less infamous but pervasive diseases that cause great harm, like, NTDs. At a time when the world is focused on global health, the NTD community is offering important leadership that I hope will encourage many other global health efforts to stop neglecting what is the singular foundation upon which to build better health.

About the Author:

Her Excellency Mrs. Toyin Saraki is Founder/President of the Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA). She is a former regional First Lady and Nigerian philanthropist who has spent two decades as a global advocate on behalf of women. She is a former two-term Global Goodwill Ambassador for the International Confederation of Midwives and a Special Advisor to the Independent Advisory Group of the WHO’s Regional Office for Africa. @ToyinSaraki

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