Abstract

AbstractWater and sanitation services are critical for public health. The importance of these services is reflected in SDG 6 and the associated targets 6.1, 6.2 and 6.3. Much progress remains to be made to achieve these targets, but it is already becoming clear that greater ambition is needed. This paper looks at three global challenges: the need to increase the level of service to protect public health including infectious respiratory diseases; the role of sanitation in combatting anti-microbial resistance (AMR); and the urgent need to build more climate-resilient services. We need to upgrade the SDG targets to focus on universal access to piped water on premises, to incorporate action on AMR in definitions of safe sanitation and to embed actions to improve resilience, which take into account the greater ambition called for in the SDG 6 targets. This requires a shift in thinking in the sector, away from relying on households and communities to manage their services to properly funded, professional services staffed by trained technical, managerial and finance staff. This will require more public finance and better use of financial instruments that have proved effective in other sectors. Increasing our ambition will mean the world can achieve the aim of universal access to safe, sustainable, and resilient services and protect public health.

Highlights

  • Water and sanitation services are critical to protecting public health

  • The three first targets of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 6 relate to the delivery of drinking water supply and sanitation services and the management of wastewater quality

  • This paper has focused on three critical challenges facing the water and sanitation sector – its ability to contribute to halting transmission of infectious disease, the increasing threat of anti-microbial resistance (AMR) and tackling the climate emergency

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Water and sanitation services are critical to protecting public health. They are recognised human rights under international law (UNGA ). The three first targets of SDG 6 relate to the delivery of drinking water supply and sanitation services and the management of wastewater quality.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call