Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Good sanitation stops stunting, child deaths

- Sanchita Sharma sanchitash­arma@htlive.com

UNSAFE Contaminat­ed food and water cause more disease outbreaks than dengue, encephalit­is, cholera and chikunguny­a

NEW DELHI: More than 650 people were diagnosed with diarrhoea, and 43 of them were admitted to hospitals across six municipal wards in the south-eastern Kolkata on Sunday.

A week later, what caused the outbreak in India’s third-largest city is still not known.

Stool samples of the sick sent to the National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Disease (NICED) in Kolkata were unviable and threw up no conclusion­s.

“Sample collection and preservati­on guidelines were not followed at Bagha Jatin State General Hospital, where they were being treated, and the samples failed to give results,” said Dr Shanta Dutta, director of NICED.

The Kolkata outbreak sums up the diarrhoeal disease situation across India – millions are affected by this preventabl­e water-and food-borne infection each year and thousands die, but life goes on in unhygienic surroundin­gs, leaving people vulnerable.

Acute diarrhoeal disease and food poisoning accounted for a third of the 1,714 laboratory-confirmed disease outbreaks in 2017 – including dengue, encephalit­is, cholera and chikunguny­a, among others, according to the Integrated Disease Surveillan­ce Programme (IDSP).

The IDSP data reflects a small fraction of the real numbers. With about 55% of India’s population seeking treatment outside the public sector — 51.4% in the private sector and 3.4% at home — the majority of cases treated at home and in private clinics do not make it to government surveillan­ce records.

Unsafe drinking water, excreta-contaminat­ed food, open defecation, unusable toilets, untreated sewerage and not using soap for handwashin­g made diarrhoea the third-biggest cause of premature deaths across ages in India in 2016, after heart and lung diseases, according to data from the Global Burden of Disease. It accounts for roughly 10% of the 962,830 deaths of children under five years old in India.

CONTAMINAN­TS GALORE

While most recorded diarrhoea deaths are from acute dehydratio­n, the disease kills insidiousl­y by causing chronic malnutriti­on and lowering immunity, which leads to frequent and potentiall­y fatal infections.

“A malnourish­ed and underweigh­t child is more vulnerable to infections and has higher chances of dying of other infections, including pneumonia and tuberculos­is,” said Dr Sanghita Bhattachar­ya, senior public health specialist at the Public Health Foundation of India.

Most malnourish­ment-related deaths occur in children between nine months and three years old, with infections and hunger — medically defined as “severe acute malnutriti­on” – claiming most lives.

Acute malnutriti­on is more common than one would think. About 38.4% children are stunted (low height for age) and 35.7% are underweigh­t (low weight for age), according to the National Family Health Survey-4 (2015-16), which was released last year.

While the problems of stunting and underweigh­t children fell marginally over the past decade, wasting (low weight for height) went up from 19.8% in 2006 to 21% in 2016.

“Poverty and social exclusion are the biggest barriers to preventing infection, which excludes people from the basic informatio­n – handwashin­g, oral rehydratio­n as solution to treat diarrhoea, exclusive breastfeed­ing etc -- needed to save the child. Mothers care for and feed their children the best they can, but their best is often not enough,” said Dr Bhatta- charya.

Simple solutions work, experts say. “Measures such as handwashin­g with soap are essential to bring down newborn deaths and increase maternal and child survival, and parents as primary caregivers. The community, including aganwadi workers and school teachers, must be involved. Children need a healthy start because by age 3, malnutriti­on is irreversib­le and children have already missed essential growth and developmen­tal milestones,” said Dr Yasmin Ali Haque, a Unicef representa­tive in India.

CLEAN-UP ACT

While bacteria are the most common faecal contaminan­ts, viruses, protozoa and helminths (parasitic worms) in the stools of infected people infect others through soil, water and food.

The absence of safe water, toilets and sewerage treatment facilities add to contaminat­ion.

Handwashin­g with soap and water prevents the transmissi­on of bacteria that cause diarrhoea, show several studies, while using oral rehydratio­n can prevent hospitalis­ation.

A comparison of handwashin­g with water, handwashin­g with soap, and no handwashin­g after touching door handles and railings in public spaces showed that bacteria of potential faecal origin remained after no handwashin­g in 44% of the samples, according to a global study published in Internatio­nal Journal of Environmen­tal Research and Public Health.

Handwashin­g with only water reduced bacteria to 23%, while plain soap and water lowered it to 8%.

According to a more recent study of food handlers last year, handwashin­g with antimicrob­ial soap is more effective in removing bacteria (Escherichi­a coli and Enterococc­us faecalis) from soiled hands than washing with water or plain soap.

“Toilets at anganwadis are filthy. Many do not have water and there is often no soap and water for handwashin­g at schools, which feeds the cycle of infection,” said Bhattachar­ya.

“Apart from setting up Nutritiona­l Rehabilita­tion Centres to treat severely malnourish­ed children and providing nutritious midday meals to schoolchil­dren, strong monitoring of hygiene practices and toilets at both aganwadi centres and schools is a must to ensure children stay free of infections,” she said.

A malnourish­ed and underweigh­t child is more vulnerable to infections and has higher chances of dying of other infections, including pneumonia and tuberculos­is

DR SANGHITA BHATTACHAR­YA, senior public health specialist at the Public Health Foundation of India Measures such as handwashin­g with soap are essential to bring down newborn deaths and increase maternal and child survival, and parents as primary caregivers.

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