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Global WASH Statistics

Data on Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene

Photo of a water faucet, silhouetted against the horizon
  • Water-related diseases are the most common cause of illness and death among poor people in developing countries. According to the World Health Organization,1.6 million deaths per year can be attributed to unsafe water, poor sanitation, and lack of hygiene (1).
  • An estimated 1.1 billion people do not have access to an improved water source * (2). Many more obtain their drinking water from improved but microbiologically unsafe sources.
  • An estimated 2.6 billion people — half of the developing world — lack access to adequate sanitation (almost 40% of the world’s population) (3-4).
  • Unsafe drinking water, inadequate availability of water for hygiene and lack of access to sanitation together contribute to about 88% of deaths from diarrheal diseases, or more than 1.5 million of the 1.9 million children younger than 5 years of age who perish from diarrhea each year, mostly in developing countries. This amounts to 18% of all the deaths of children under the age of five and means that more than 5,000 children are dying every day as a result of diarrheal diseases (13).
  • Improved water sources reduce diarrhea morbidity by 21%; improved sanitation reduces diarrhea morbidity by 37.5%; and the simple act of washing hands at critical times can reduce the number of diarrhea cases by as much as 35%. Improvement of drinking-water quality, such as point-of-use disinfection, would lead to a 45% reduction of diarrhea episodes (1).
  • According to the United Nations Millennium Development Goals Report, regions with the lowest coverage of "improved" sanitation in 2004 were sub-Saharan Africa (37%), Southern Asia (38%) and Eastern Asia (45%) (5).
  • In 2004, more than three out of every five rural people, over 2 billion, did not have access to a basic sanitation facility (6).
  • Worldwide, millions of people are infected with neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), many of which are water and/or hygiene-related, such as Guinea Worm Disease, Buruli Ulcer, Trachoma, and Schistosomiasis. These diseases are most often found in places with unsafe drinking water, poor sanitation, and insufficient hygiene practices (7-8).
  • Worldwide, soil-transmitted helminths infect more than one billion people due to a lack of adequate sanitation (9).
  • Guinea Worm Disease (GWD) is an extremely painful parasitic infection spread through contaminated drinking water. GWD is characterized by thread-like worms slowly emerging from the human body through blisters. Infection affects poor communities in remote parts of Africa that do not have safe water to drink. In 2007, over 9,500 cases of Guinea Worm Disease were reported. Most of those cases were from Sudan (61%) and Ghana (35%) (10).
  • Trachoma is the world’s leading cause of preventable blindness and results from poor hygiene and sanitation. Approximately 41 million people suffer from active trachoma and nearly 10 million people are visually impaired or irreversibly blind as a result of trachoma (11). Trachoma infection can be prevented through increased facial cleanliness with soap and clean water, and improved sanitation.
  • According to the United Nations and UNICEF, one in five girls of primary-school age are not in school, compared to one in six boys. One factor accounting for this difference is the lack of sanitation facilities for girls reaching puberty. Girls are also more likely to be responsible for collecting water for their family, making it difficult for them to attend school during school hours (5, 12). The installation of toilets and latrines may enable school children, especially menstruating girls, to further their education by remaining in the school system.
  • In order to meet the United Nations' Millennium Development Goal (PDF, 2.31 mb, 21 pages) to halve the proportion of people without sustainable access to improved drinking water and basic sanitation by 2015:
    • An estimated 1.1 billion people will need to gain access to an improved water source.
    • An estimated 1.6 billion people will need to gain access to basic sanitation (accounting for expected population growth) (6).
  • Even if the United Nations' Millennium Development Goal (PDF, 2.31 mb, 21 pages) for improved drinking water and basic sanitation is reached by 2015, it will still leave:
    • An estimated 790 million people (11% of the world’s population) without access to an improved water supply.
    • An estimated 1.8 billion people (25% of the world’s population) without access to adequate sanitation (6).

* An improved water source is defined as water that is supplied through a household connection, public standpipe, borehole well, protected dug well, protected spring, or rainwater collection.


1. UN Millennium Project. Health, Dignity, and Development: What Will it Take? Available at http://www.unmillenniumproject.org/documents/WaterComplete-lowres.pdf.
2.  World Health Organization. Meeting the MDG Drinking Water and Sanitation Target: A Mid-Term Assessment of Progress. Available at http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/monitoring/jmp2004/en/index.html.
3.  The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs.  International Year of Sanitation: Sanitation is Vital for Human Health. Available at http://esa.un.org/iys/health.shtml.
4.  U.S. Census Bureau. International Programs Center: Population Clocks. Available at http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/.
5.  The United Nations. Millennium Development Goals Report 2007. Available at http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/pdf/mdg2007.pdf.
6.   World Health Organization and UNICEF. Meeting the MDG Drinking Water and Sanitation Target: The Urban and Rural Challenge of the Decade. Available at http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/monitoring/jmpfinal.pdf.
7. World Health Organization. Neglected Tropical Diseases, Hidden Successes, Emerging Opportunities. Available at http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2006/WHO_CDS_NTD_2006.2_eng.pdf.
8. Hotez PJ, Molyneux DH, Fenwick A, Ottesen E, Ehrlich Sachs S, Sachs JD. Incorporating a rapid-impact package for neglected tropical diseases with programs for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria. PLoS Med 2006;3(5):e102. Available at http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.0030102 .
9.  World Health Organization. Soil-Transmitted Helminths. Available at  http://www.who.int/intestinal_worms/en/index.html.
10. The Carter Center. Distribution by Country of 9,570 Cases of Dracunculiasis Reported During 2007. Available at http://www.cartercenter.org/resources/pdfs/health/
guinea_worm/guinea_worm_cases_country_2007.pdf
.
11. International Trachoma Initiative. What is Trachoma? Available at http://www.trachoma.org/core/sub.php?cat=trachoma&id=trachoma.
12.  UNICEF and IRC. Water Sanitation and Hygiene Education for Schools: Roundtable Proceedings and Framework for Action. Available at http://esa.un.org/iys/docs/san_lib_docs/SSHE_OxfordRoundTable.pdf.
13. UNICEF. Progress for Children: A Report Card on Water and Sanitation. Number 5, September 2006. Available at http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/Progress_for_Children_No._5_-_English.pdf (PDF, 1.2 mb, 36 pages)


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