Sowetan

Lighting big worry when sharing a loo

Hygiene ranks lower, survey finds

- By Nico Gous

South African households sharing toilets are more worried about poor lighting than poor hygiene.

That is what Stats SA said on World Toilet Day on Monday. The day focuses on improving access to toilets and sustainabl­e management of water and sanitation for everyone by 2030. According to their 2017 General Household Survey (GHS)‚ more than 23.7% of households worried about poor lighting and 21.6% about poor hygiene.

“Going to the toilet is a basic human need. Women and girls are more at risk of attack and if the toilet facilities are poorly lit they cannot go to the toilet when they want or need to. Shared toilets or community toilets do not address the needs of women and girls who are at greater risk of harassment and sexual violence than men.” Stats SA wrote‚ referencin­g their GHS report on water and sanitation: “Lack of basic sanitation indirectly inhibits the learning abilities of millions of school-aged children who are infested with intestinal worms transmitte­d through inadequate sanitation facilities and poor hygiene. Every year‚ millions of the world’s poorest people die from preventabl­e diseases caused by inadequate water supply and sanitation services. Women and children are the main victims.”

The GHS survey also found the number of households using bucket toilets or without sanitation facilities declined from 12.6% in 2002 to 3.1% last year. The sharpest decline was in the Eastern Cape.

Stats SA said the number of households with access to improved sanitation had increased from 61.7% in 2002 to 82.2% last year.

“Access to proper sanitation is important and must ensure that human rights and human dignity are preserved. The provision of toilets must also provide for the requiremen­ts of women and girls using public and community toilets‚” wrote Stats SA. “Shared toilets allow households who do not have toilets in their individual homes access to toilets. However‚ they do present a myriad of problems which point to health and safety issues in communitie­s.” Unhygienic toilets can lead to cholera and diarrhoea. Washing your hands can help control infectious diseases‚ but 17.9% of households said they could not wash their hands because they did not have water.

 ??  ?? Shared toilets present health and safety issues in communitie­s.
Shared toilets present health and safety issues in communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa