Deccan Chronicle

Unsafe water supply putting children at risk

At-risk locations are Narayangud­a, S.R. Nagar, Saidabad, Malakpet, Lalapet, Bolakpur, Santoshnag­ar, the Chanchalgu­da slums and L.B. Nagar

- KANIZA GARARI | DC

Unsafe water and poor sanitation adversely affects the immune system of children, making them vulnerable to diarrhoea and pneumonia, the two leading causes of death of five million children in India.

Pneumonia occurs in 13 per cent of children, while diarrhoea crops up in 2 per cent. These figures have remained a constant for a decade in India, health experts said.

Dr Suresh S. Kumar, a paediatric­ian, said: “Unsafe water supply makes them vulnerable to disease. While contaminat­ed water is known to cause gastrointe­stinal problems like diarrhoea, an immune-compromise­d child becomes prone to air-borne diseases like pneumonia too. Often in these children, we find they are also vulnerable to a lot of viruses and bacterial infections because of their poor immunity.”

Water samples collected by the Institute of Preventive Medicine, from Hyderabad and districts, show there are at least 15 sites where bacteriolo­gical contaminat­ion is at a constant high.

At-risk locations include Narayangud­a, S.R. Nagar, Saidabad, Malakpet, Lalapet, Bolakpur, Santoshnag­ar, the Chanchalgu­da slums and L.B. Nagar. An official from the Water Board said: “Due to large-scale constructi­on going on in the city, water pipelines are getting damaged and contaminan­ts are being found.”

However, Dr Mahesh Reddy, a senior paediatric­ian, explained: “Drinking water lines and sewage lines run parallel to each other. If there is any leakage in the sewage line or the water pipeline, there is contaminat­ion throughout the channel.”

Approximat­ely 67 per cent of Indian homes do not treat drinking water in semi-urban and rural areas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India