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Geographical Inequalities in Use of Improved Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation across Sub-Saharan Africa: Mapping and Spatial Analysis of Cross-sectional Survey Data
by
Brooker, Simon J.
, Pullan, Rachel L.
, Freeman, Matthew C.
, Gething, Peter W.
in
Africa South of the Sahara
/ Control
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Defecation
/ Drinking water
/ Drinking Water - analysis
/ Environmental Monitoring
/ Geographic Mapping
/ Health aspects
/ Households
/ Management
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Quality control
/ Quality management
/ Sanitation
/ Sanitation - statistics & numerical data
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Spatial Analysis
/ Sub-Saharan Africa
/ Water pollution
/ Water quality
/ Water supply
/ Water Supply - analysis
2014
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Geographical Inequalities in Use of Improved Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation across Sub-Saharan Africa: Mapping and Spatial Analysis of Cross-sectional Survey Data
by
Brooker, Simon J.
, Pullan, Rachel L.
, Freeman, Matthew C.
, Gething, Peter W.
in
Africa South of the Sahara
/ Control
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Defecation
/ Drinking water
/ Drinking Water - analysis
/ Environmental Monitoring
/ Geographic Mapping
/ Health aspects
/ Households
/ Management
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Quality control
/ Quality management
/ Sanitation
/ Sanitation - statistics & numerical data
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Spatial Analysis
/ Sub-Saharan Africa
/ Water pollution
/ Water quality
/ Water supply
/ Water Supply - analysis
2014
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Do you wish to request the book?
Geographical Inequalities in Use of Improved Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation across Sub-Saharan Africa: Mapping and Spatial Analysis of Cross-sectional Survey Data
by
Brooker, Simon J.
, Pullan, Rachel L.
, Freeman, Matthew C.
, Gething, Peter W.
in
Africa South of the Sahara
/ Control
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Defecation
/ Drinking water
/ Drinking Water - analysis
/ Environmental Monitoring
/ Geographic Mapping
/ Health aspects
/ Households
/ Management
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Quality control
/ Quality management
/ Sanitation
/ Sanitation - statistics & numerical data
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Spatial Analysis
/ Sub-Saharan Africa
/ Water pollution
/ Water quality
/ Water supply
/ Water Supply - analysis
2014
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Geographical Inequalities in Use of Improved Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation across Sub-Saharan Africa: Mapping and Spatial Analysis of Cross-sectional Survey Data
Journal Article
Geographical Inequalities in Use of Improved Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation across Sub-Saharan Africa: Mapping and Spatial Analysis of Cross-sectional Survey Data
2014
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Overview
Understanding geographic inequalities in coverage of drinking-water supply and sanitation (WSS) will help track progress towards universal coverage of water and sanitation by identifying marginalized populations, thus helping to control a large number of infectious diseases. This paper uses household survey data to develop comprehensive maps of WSS coverage at high spatial resolution for sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Analysis is extended to investigate geographic heterogeneity and relative geographic inequality within countries.
Cluster-level data on household reported use of improved drinking-water supply, sanitation, and open defecation were abstracted from 138 national surveys undertaken from 1991-2012 in 41 countries. Spatially explicit logistic regression models were developed and fitted within a Bayesian framework, and used to predict coverage at the second administrative level (admin2, e.g., district) across SSA for 2012. Results reveal substantial geographical inequalities in predicted use of water and sanitation that exceed urban-rural disparities. The average range in coverage seen between admin2 within countries was 55% for improved drinking water, 54% for use of improved sanitation, and 59% for dependence upon open defecation. There was also some evidence that countries with higher levels of inequality relative to coverage in use of an improved drinking-water source also experienced higher levels of inequality in use of improved sanitation (rural populations r = 0.47, p = 0.002; urban populations r = 0.39, p = 0.01). Results are limited by the quantity of WSS data available, which varies considerably by country, and by the reliability and utility of available indicators.
This study identifies important geographic inequalities in use of WSS previously hidden within national statistics, confirming the necessity for targeted policies and metrics that reach the most marginalized populations. The presented maps and analysis approach can provide a mechanism for monitoring future reductions in inequality within countries, reflecting priorities of the post-2015 development agenda. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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