The effects of racism, social exclusion, and discrimination on achieving universal safe water and sanitation in high-income countries.
Lancet Glob Health
; 11(4): e606-e614, 2023 04.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-36925180
Drinking water and sanitation services in high-income countries typically bring widespread health and other benefits to their populations. Yet gaps in this essential public health infrastructure persist, driven by structural inequalities, racism, poverty, housing instability, migration, climate change, insufficient continued investment, and poor planning. Although the burden of disease attributable to these gaps is mostly uncharacterised in high-income settings, case studies from marginalised communities and data from targeted studies of microbial and chemical contaminants underscore the need for continued investment to realise the human rights to water and sanitation. Delivering on these rights requires: applying a systems approach to the problems; accessible, disaggregated data; new approaches to service provision that centre communities and groups without consistent access; and actionable policies that recognise safe water and sanitation provision as an obligation of government, regardless of factors such as race, ethnicity, gender, ability to pay, citizenship status, disability, land tenure, or property rights.
Texto completo:
1
Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Contexto en salud:
12_ODS3_hazardous_contamination
/
1_ASSA2030
/
2_ODS3
Problema de salud:
12_water_sanitation_hygiene
/
1_desigualdade_iniquidade
/
2_enfermedades_transmissibles
/
2_quimicos_contaminacion
Asunto principal:
Agua Potable
/
Racismo
Tipo de estudio:
Prognostic_studies
Aspecto:
Determinantes_sociais_saude
/
Equity_inequality
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Lancet Glob Health
Año:
2023
Tipo del documento:
Article