AI Article Synopsis

  • Sub-Saharan Africa is experiencing rapid urbanization, but the growth of infrastructure, particularly in water supply, is lagging behind, leading to issues with access to safe drinking water.
  • A review of 32 studies from 24 cities across 17 countries found a focus on diseases like diarrhea, cholera, and typhoid, but there was a weak correlation between the study designs and the health outcomes linked to water sufficiency.
  • The review suggests that prioritizing health surveillance and monitoring water supply metrics in urban areas is essential to reduce the prevalence of waterborne diseases.

Article Abstract

The sub-Saharan Africa has the fastest rate of urbanisation in the world. However, infrastructure growth in the region is slower than urbanisation rates, leading to inadequate provision and access to basic services such as piped safe drinking water. Lack of sufficient access to safe water has the potential to increase the burden of waterborne diseases among these urbanising populations. This scoping review assesses how the relationship between waterborne diseases and water sufficiency in Africa has been studied. In April 2020, we searched the Web of Science, PubMed, Embase and Google Scholar databases for studies of African cities that examined the effect of insufficient piped water supply on selected waterborne disease and syndromes (cholera, typhoid, diarrhea, amoebiasis, dysentery, gastroneteritis, cryptosporidium, cyclosporiasis, giardiasis, rotavirus). Only studies conducted in cities that had more than half a million residents in 2014 were included.  A total of 32 studies in 24 cities from 17 countries were included in the study. Most studies used case-control, cross-sectional individual or ecological level study designs. Proportion of the study population with access to piped water was the common water availability metrics measured while amounts consumed per capita or water interruptions were seldom used in assessing sufficient water supply. Diarrhea, cholera and typhoid were the major diseases or syndromes used to understand the association between health and water sufficiency in urban areas. There was weak correlation between the study designs used and the association with health outcomes and water sufficiency metrics. Very few studies looked at change in health outcomes and water sufficiency over time. Surveillance of health outcomes and the trends in piped water quantity and mode of access should be prioritised in urban areas in Africa in order to implement interventions towards reducing the burden associated with waterborne diseases and syndromes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8311817PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/aasopenres.13225.1DOI Listing

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