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1 verage (referred to here as "newly-installed sanitation").
2 ould explain the limited impacts of improved sanitation.
3 till lack access to clean drinking water and sanitation.
4 lly in India, where many lack safe water and sanitation.
5 y intake, rapid urbanisation, and inadequate sanitation.
6 s related to poverty reduction and water and sanitation.
7 oductivity, food security, water supply, and sanitation.
8 in the domestic environment despite on-site sanitation.
9 ashing agent in waterless urinals to improve sanitation.
10 ants and children born into poor hygiene and sanitation.
11 , and services and access to clean water and sanitation.
12 lopment and improvements in water supply and sanitation.
13 of poverty reduction, health, education, and sanitation.
14 SD/person/year), followed by container-based sanitation (10-17 USD/person/year), onsite sanitation (2
15 d sanitation (10-17 USD/person/year), onsite sanitation (2-14 USD/person/year), and mini-sewers conne
16 ents if they 1) had access to safe water and sanitation; 2) lived in households with finished floors,
19 ndomization to optimize balance in water and sanitation access across treatment arms at the start of
22 itation coverage versus individual household sanitation access on child health and drinking water qua
23 tion and hygiene exposures, including shared sanitation access, as risk factors for moderate-to-sever
24 er interventions, such as improved water and sanitation access, modify risk would further our underst
26 affected by standards of infection control, sanitation, access to clean water, access to assured qua
28 ng scenarios: (1) Startup relying on partial sanitation aid, and (2) Self-sustaining without philanth
29 lation, overall 1990-2012 change in improved sanitation (all technologies), and per capita freshwater
31 t until long-term solutions such as improved sanitation and access to clean water become widely avail
32 sion indicated that households with improved sanitation and cement floors in the kitchen area had red
33 pact of other interventions such as improved sanitation and changes in HIV management cannot be disco
34 proved agricultural production, and improved sanitation and child care practices as drivers of stunti
37 fecal contamination to those with unimproved sanitation and dirt floors (Beta: -1.18 log10 E. coli CF
38 ditionally, survey and observational data on sanitation and domestic hygiene practices were collected
39 lopment and water-borne disease cases. While sanitation and economic development can improve public h
40 l for the improvement of worldwide access to sanitation and for the reduction of the environmental im
42 abundance vary by region, and that improving sanitation and health could potentially limit the global
43 in household air pollution (HAP) and water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH), working in poor parts of
44 The objective of this study was to describe sanitation and hygiene access across the Global Enteric
47 sites in Africa and South Asia and to assess sanitation and hygiene exposures, including shared sanit
48 tute, and new partners such as the WHO Water Sanitation and Hygiene Group, UNDP, and UN-Habitat, in o
51 , HIV, Nutrition, Family Planning, and Water Sanitation and Hygiene Program Strategy Teams (Bill and
52 k factors (e.g., education status, household sanitation and hygiene, and urban or rural residence) in
57 and other waterborne infections, the role of sanitation and socioeconomic factors on the spatial vari
58 rvoirs, we performed extensive remodeling of sanitation and water installations as the focus of our h
59 ies that lack the infrastructure to maintain sanitation and where inadequate diagnostic methods have
60 Further efforts in the health, water and sanitation, and agriculture sectors will support continu
61 settings-such as water supply and treatment, sanitation, and cleaner household energy services-have h
65 ional studies have shown that water quality, sanitation, and handwashing (WASH) in a household are st
66 These substudies included 4 groups: water, sanitation, and handwashing (WSH); nutrition (N), includ
70 dent and combined effects of improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) and improved infant and y
72 's (WHO) 2015-2020 Global Strategy on water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) and neglected tropical di
75 magnitude of the protective effect of water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) interventions without pre
77 smitted helminths (STHs) suggest that water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) might reduce their transm
78 ung child feeding (IYCF) and improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) on child linear growth an
79 dent and combined effects of improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), and improved infant and
80 managed animal feces transmitted via water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH)-related pathways in low-
81 ed education, and increased access to water, sanitation, and hygiene as drivers of stunting reduction
84 also impact antimicrobial resistance, water, sanitation, and hygiene improvement is highly recommende
85 from randomized controlled trials of water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions have raised questi
86 a and if ingestion decreased with the water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions implemented in the
92 translational potential for modulating diet, sanitation, and microbiota composition during antibiotic
94 tions with unsafe water and lack of adequate sanitation, and unsafe foods-all reasons for the disease
95 nation, actions to improve nutrition status, sanitation, and water quality are important to reduce en
100 ith the poorest access to improved water and sanitation are not the same as districts with the greate
101 g locations with limited access to water and sanitation are projected to avert 273,939 (95% CI 270,31
103 ecal marker was lower on mother hands in the sanitation arm in adjusted models, but these association
104 117 in the water treatment arm, 1,160 in the sanitation arm, 1,141 in the handwashing arm, 1,064 in t
106 in parallel with this study) re-envisioning sanitation as a human-derived resource system, here we c
107 This framework offers a shared vision for sanitation as a human-derived resource system, where peo
111 pact of improved access to water, health and sanitation as well as mass drug administration campaigns
113 A comparison with current national water and sanitation budgets showed that the cost of implementing
114 ountries through enhancements of hygiene and sanitation but the disease is still a challenge in devel
115 Development Goal seeks to achieve universal sanitation, but a lack of progress due to inhibiting fac
116 e cover is similar to the effect of improved sanitation, but smaller than the effect of improved wate
118 structural quality and cleanliness of shared sanitation by targeting landlords with a scalable, theor
120 s work was to determine if resource recovery sanitation can be a profitable business model in a speci
125 pathogenic microbes, such as antibiotics and sanitation, combined with other factors such as processe
126 morbidity in developing countries with poor sanitation conditions that enable fecal contamination of
128 l education, household socioeconomic status, sanitation conditions, maternal health services access,
131 ource recovery may generate income to offset sanitation costs while also enhancing agriculture throug
134 o low to achieve national goals for improved sanitation coverage through fully commercial distributio
135 Sufficient consumer demand is required for sanitation coverage to expand through private provision.
136 estimated cluster-specific water access and sanitation coverage to inform a constrained randomizatio
137 s study investigated the effect of community sanitation coverage versus individual household sanitati
138 afely managed systems (Target 6.2: universal sanitation coverage) and those connected to sewers witho
141 contamination in settings with high on-site sanitation coverage; (2) determine how domestic animals
143 ificantly reduced, potentially influenced by sanitation development (1990-2017, 2.63 +/- 0.01%/year).
144 for observed changes in groundwater quality, sanitation development and water-borne disease cases. Wh
148 the relation between access to, and use of, sanitation facilities and water treatment and infection
150 ed at increasing access to private household sanitation facilities may reduce the burden of MSD in ch
152 the individual level about access or use of sanitation facilities or water treatment, in combination
154 wealth: in the poorest quintile, households' sanitation facilities were almost 170 times more likely
158 ves, household water treatment, and improved sanitation facilities, have great potential to yield red
159 surveys) were used to classify households by sanitation facility (facilities needing FSM, sewered fac
160 t whether the number of households sharing a sanitation facility affects a child's risk of diarrhea.
162 useholds that did not versus did share their sanitation facility also had less contaminated kitchen f
163 people worldwide lack access to an improved sanitation facility that adequately retains or treats fe
165 district in terms of fuel used for cooking, sanitation facility, drinking water source, and parental
166 which includes inadequate drinking water and sanitation facility, is associated with health outcomes
167 useholds at six sites (>93%) had access to a sanitation facility, while 70% of households in rural Ke
168 sitive interventions, including clean water, sanitation, family planning, girls' education, and socia
169 de empirical research, offering insight into sanitation for informal settlements and more sustainable
170 elopment Goals (SDGs) recognize that current sanitation gaps must be closed to better serve those wit
171 We evaluated the impact of low-cost water, sanitation, handwashing (WSH) and child nutrition interv
175 We evaluated the effects of water quality, sanitation, handwashing, and nutrition interventions on
176 gnant women into individual water treatment, sanitation, handwashing, nutrition, combined WSH, combin
177 to collect a comprehensive dataset on water, sanitation, health, and living conditions in these uninc
178 eloping countries because of a lack of basic sanitation, healthcare clinics, and centralized laborato
179 lopment (ECD) among children enrolled in the Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy (SHINE) tri
180 ssion among children aged 0-18 months in the Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy (SHINE) tri
181 ) interventions on enteric infections in the Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy (SHINE) tri
182 l design and randomized interventions of the Sanitation Hygiene Infant Nutrition Efficacy trial in Zi
185 GI sites under conditions driven by improved sanitation/hygiene and reduced fecal-oral transmission;
186 e critical and synergistic role of water and sanitation improvements in concert with vaccine introduc
188 udies have investigated the effectiveness of sanitation in rural LMICs in reducing pathogens in the e
189 nancial requirements for achieving universal sanitation in the next 10 years and their breakdown betw
191 water sources may be degraded by inadequate sanitation infrastructure and other uncontrolled wastewa
192 public health concern in communities lacking sanitation infrastructure to separate sewage from drinki
193 , reduced rates of open defecation, improved sanitation infrastructure, and improved access to key ma
194 countries has intensified the need to expand sanitation infrastructure, especially in informal settle
196 ith under-resourced utilities and inadequate sanitation infrastructure-can exacerbate mechanisms caus
198 h initiation of acceletated constructions of sanitation infrastructures through Clean India (Swachh B
199 In this study, we measured the impact of a sanitation intervention (dual-pit latrines, sani-scoops,
200 te routine immunization and other health and sanitation interventions related to maternal and childre
204 FSM strategies must be included in future sanitation investment to achieve safe management of feca
205 egies for deriving the greatest benefit from sanitation investments while also identifying overarchin
207 first evidence, to our knowledge, that poor sanitation is associated with a higher risk of APOs.
210 ation technology as a household moves up the sanitation ladder with the added function of resource re
212 a rapidly evolving emergency situation, poor sanitation, malnutrition, overcrowding, and lack of acce
213 disease prevention and treatment, water and sanitation, maternal and child health, basic education a
215 utions to the survival of the human species: sanitation, nutrition, vaccines, and antimicrobial agent
217 service system value chain offers a low-cost sanitation option with potential for revenue generation
218 rates for communities with inadequate water, sanitation, or hygiene facilities including those with i
223 f the bacteria, behavioral changes, adequate sanitation, population screening and diagnosis using mul
224 d the arms with the individual interventions sanitation (PR: 0.89 [95% CI 0.73, 1.08], p = 0.228), ha
225 t caste and poverty are associated with poor sanitation practice driving APOs, and we cannot rule out
226 lts demonstrate that the association of poor sanitation practices (open defecation) with these outcom
227 his study aimed to assess how floor type and sanitation practices impacted the concentration of fecal
228 because there were no significant changes in sanitation practices or latrine upgrades where baseline
233 illages with low exposure to prior water and sanitation projects, and may be most effective in social
235 for a supporting rather than leading role in sanitation promotion because they did demonstrate abilit
236 eries of group meetings designed to motivate sanitation quality improvement as a way to build wealth
239 unities that have limited access to improved sanitation, safe water sources, and optimal medical care
240 ere we characterize existing and alternative sanitation scenarios in an informal settlement in Kampal
243 also varied according to household access to sanitation services (P = .027), whereas that of exposure
244 en made to improve access to clean water and sanitation services in the country, there is still a sig
245 thout rapid progress in developing water and sanitation services or dramatic increases in OCV supply,
246 on is typically willing to provide water and sanitation services to displaced persons for a set perio
248 hance the ability of systems to provide safe sanitation services, especially in resource-limited cont
249 the total population without at least basic sanitation services, in 10 Sub-Saharan African countries
250 pecially if combined with improved water and sanitation services, strengthened surveillance systems,
252 research makes a case to support innovative sanitation strategies and the development and financial
253 of improved housing (with improved water and sanitation, sufficient living area and durable construct
254 sing (with improved drinking water, improved sanitation, sufficient living area, and finished buildin
258 ll, the evaluated frameworks did not share a sanitation sustainability definition or core set of esse
259 on, there is a need to better understand how sanitation sustainability is defined and measured and th
261 We distinguish impacts from newly installed sanitation systems (to achieve universal coverage), newl
262 to identify priorities and measure how well sanitation systems address them, based upon their import
264 Recovering human-derived nutrients from sanitation systems can offset inorganic fertilizer use a
265 lth concerns, implementing resource recovery sanitation systems could simultaneously improve the avai
268 toilets, and we demonstrate that alternative sanitation systems may offer multidimensional improvemen
270 ocal recovery potential of each product from sanitation systems that will need to be installed to ach
275 ay be useful in developing new antimicrobial sanitation technologies for food and pharmaceutical indu
277 culturally aligned training for more complex sanitation technologies that enable resource recovery.
279 In adoption decisions for decentralized sanitation technologies, two decision makers are involve
282 tivation and may lead to new developments in sanitation technology and treatment of fecal sludge.
283 es the functional transition toward improved sanitation technology as a household moves up the sanita
284 ts have broad implications for understanding sanitation technology transitions in rural and indigenou
285 anitation to identify guiding principles for sanitation that advance sustainable development at the n
286 e sustainable development goal around global sanitation, there is a need to better understand how san
288 se will guide interdisciplinary study around sanitation to identify guiding principles for sanitation
289 g from changes in fertility rates, water and sanitation, undernutrition, and coverage of indicators o
293 ing and quarantine) and mitigation (hygiene, sanitation, ventilation, and social distancing) practice
294 control groups of the three trials, baseline sanitation was a strong risk factor for stunting in the
295 treatment of drinking water, and unimproved sanitation were associated with Campylobacter jejuni/col
296 ammation, low socioeconomic status, and poor sanitation were each associated with anemia in >50% of s
297 sks factors, such as undernutrition and poor sanitation, which were mainly associated with maternal a
298 od candidate for incentivizing decentralized sanitation while the Allegheny County Sanitary Authority
299 e attributable to it, followed by unimproved sanitation, with 7.2 million (95% CI 6.3 million-8.2 mil
300 has focused primarily on improved water and sanitation, with the available vaccines unsuitable for c