28/02/22

COVID-19 boost for handwashing in South Asia

handwashing in India
Children washing their hands in Assam, India. The South Asian country has over 90 per cent of its schools equipped with handwashing facilities in 2020. Copyright: Indian Red Cross Society/Climate Centre(CC BY-NC 2.0). This image has been cropped.

Speed read

  • COVID-19 provided an opportunity to push the handwashing habit
  • Some 275 million school children in South Asia lack handwashing facilities
  • Hand hygiene has been improving in South Asian schools since 2015

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[NEW DELHI] Nicolas Osbert is convinced that when it comes to promoting the concept of handwashing, two years of the COVID-19 pandemic achieved what UNICEF, WHO and development agencies could not in two decades.

Osbert should know. He is the chief of the Water, Sanitation, Hygiene (WASH) programme at UNICEF in India and has 20 years of experience with WASH and public health programmes in Africa, Latin America and the Asia Pacific.

According to the Joint Monitoring Programme for WASH report released by UNICEF and the WHO in July 2021, COVID-19 highlighted the value of good hand hygiene. At the onset of the pandemic, three in 10 people worldwide did not have facilities within their homes to wash their hands using soap and water.

Some 818 million children around the world lacked basic handwashing facilities at their schools, placing them at increased risk of COVID-19 and other transmittable diseases, the UNICEF-WHO report said. Of these children more than a third (275 million) were from South Asia.

However, the report said that between 2015 and 2020, the global population with safely managed drinking water at home had increased from 70 per cent to 74 per cent; safely managed sanitation services grew from 47 per cent to 54 per cent; and handwashing facilities with soap and water increased from 67 per cent to 71 per cent.

In South Asia, by 2020, 80 per cent of Pakistan’s population had basic hygiene facilities including handwashing arrangements at home with soap and water. India followed with 68 per cent while Nepal recorded 62 per cent and Bangladesh 58 per cent, according to UNICEF-WHO.

The rate of improvement in basic handwashing practices between 2015 and 2020 was highest in Bangladesh at 3.33 per cent. This was followed by Pakistan with 3.15 per cent, Nepal with 1.37 per cent and India with 0.10 per cent. Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh also figure in a list of 13 countries that increased overall hygiene by five percentage points during that period.

“Our strategy for the future is to build on the massive public health wave created by the pandemic to work more systematically with government ministries and departments that are concerned with health and education”

Nicolas Osbert, UNICEF India

In 2016, according to a WHO South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO) survey, only 44 per cent of schools in Bangladesh had basic services for washing hands with soap and water. The situation in Indonesia, which falls within SEARO region, was worse with just 42 per cent while India had 55 per cent.

Even by 2020, close to 60 per cent of schools in Indonesia are still lacking functional handwashing stations equipped with water and soap.

India had far better progress for the same year. More than 90 per cent of schools in India already had basic hand wash facilities as compared to only 36.3 per cent in 2013, according to the Unified District Information System for Education of the Ministry of Human Resources Development

As COVID-19 spread across India in March 2020, UNICEF launched a programme of securing WASH services to at-risk, low-capacity and vulnerable communities in South Asia’s biggest country with a population of nearly 1.4 billion people. The programme focused on frequent handwashing with soap and water — identified as a key measure in preventing COVID-19 transmission — though it could not be pursued in schools as they were closed.

“WASH teams closely coordinated with the central Ministry of Jal Shakti, Ministry of Human Resource Development and the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, to promote school WASH programmes by supporting their policy and advocacy efforts as well as implementation,” said Osbert. “We also worked with development partners, who provided millions of bars of soap and with provincial governments in 15 states to push handwashing.”

WASH programmes also tied in neatly with India’s Swacch Bharat Mission launched in October 2014 to secure drinking water for households and provide sustainable sanitation as well as solid and liquid waste management, including plastic waste and sewage.

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“It helped that the Swacch Bharat Mission-Grameen (a public behaviour change initiative) and the Jal Jeevan Mission (to provide every household with a tap), were pet projects of Prime Minister Narendra (Modi) aimed at securing access to safe sanitation and water through empowered communities,” Anushree Mishra, a communication and advocacy specialist who was involved with the WASH programme told SciDev.Net.

“Simple handwashing with soap and water was found to work better than vaccination in preventing the spread of not only COVID-19 but pathogens responsible for diarrhoeal diseases and respiratory illnesses,” says Osbert. “The other benefit with handwashing is that it helps prevent the development of microbial resistance due to reduced use of antibiotics.”

“Our strategy for the future is to build on the massive public health wave created by the pandemic to work more systematically with government ministries and departments that are concerned with health and education,” Osbert said.

This piece was produced by SciDev.Net’s Asia & Pacific desk.