The Herald (South Africa)

Warning on hygiene with restrictio­ns

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BABIES who are bottle fed require 24 litres of clean water a day‚ civil society organisati­ons said yesterday‚ voicing their concern that drought-induced water restrictio­ns would lead to people overlookin­g good hygiene practises in an attempt to save water.

“Containers and utensils used for mixing formula that are not properly cleaned can create a breeding ground for bacteria‚” the Gateway Health Institute‚ South African Breastmilk Reserve and South African Civil Society for Women’s, Adolescent­s’ and Children’s Health warned. Diarrhoeal disease linked to water crises is a leading cause of death in young children‚ accounting for 22% of the 10 million annual deaths worldwide of children under five years old.

“Many are due to secondary contaminat­ion through water-borne diseases that reach children through formula milk.

“Drought increases the transmissi­on of bacterial and viral infection through food and water-borne processes,” the NGOs said.

“Due to their immature immune systems‚ and continued lack of water sanitation‚ diarrhoea continues to be the leading cause of death in infants and young children in South Africa.”

Millions of the country’s poorest people are struggling to access enough clean drinking water. “Feeding an infant eight times a day on formula requires 24 litres of clean water a day‚ and about 170 litres a week.”

In an attempt to reduce the impact of the drought‚ the three organisati­ons have partnered to launch Dare2Care, which aims to support children under five by helping prevent the spread of diarrhoeal disease.

One of their campaigns‚ “Kits4Kids”‚ is a call to action to bring emergency relief to mothers‚ babies and all citizens affected by the drought in water-stressed provinces.

Kits4Kids plans to distribute 20 000 care packs with sanitation and water purificati­on kits to the Western Cape’s most needy in July. –TimesLIVE

Drought increases the transmissi­on of bacterial and viral infection

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