Poverty and health

Rethinking the economic costs of malaria at the household level: Evidence from applying a new analytical framework in rural Kenya
Chuma JM, Thiede M, Molyneux CS: Malaria Journal 5:76, 31 August 2006

Malaria imposes significant costs on households and the poor are disproportionately affected. However, cost data are often from quantitative surveys with a fixed recall period. They do not capture costs that unfold slowly over time, or seasonal variations. Few studies investigate the different pathways through which malaria contributes towards poverty. In this paper, a framework indicating the complex links between malaria, poverty and vulnerability at the household level is developed and applied using data from rural Kenya.

Return of cholera expected soon in Zimbabwe
IRINNews: 19 August 2009

The return of cholera to Zimbabwe is not a matter of if, but when, said Rian van de Braak, head of mission of the medical non-governmental organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières. ‘The threat is definitely not over. Everyone expects cholera to be back, at the latest with the next rainy season [in September or October], because the root causes of the outbreak [in 2008] have not been addressed adequately yet,’ he said. The first case of the cholera epidemic that swept through Zimbabwe, killing more than 4,000 people and infecting close to 100,000 others, was reported in August 2008 and lasted almost a year until it was officially declared at en end in July 2009. Broken sanitation and water systems, the cause of Africa's worst outbreak of the waterborne disease in 15 years, are unlikely to be repaired in time. ‘Several aid agencies are drilling new boreholes in cholera hotspots, which is an important contribution to safe drinking water. Dealing with those causes before the next rainy season is a race against the clock,’ said van de Braak.

Review of 'The bottom billion' by Paul Collier
Reinert ES: Journal of Global History 6(1): 156–158, February 2011

In this review of the book, ‘The bottom billion: Why the poorest countries are failing and what can be done about it’, by Paul Collier (Oxford University Press, 2008), Reinert identifies Collier’s core argument: four ‘traps’ lock Africa into poverty, namely the conflict trap, the natural resource trap, the trap of being landlocked with bad neighbours, and the trap of bad governance in a small country. Collier’s analysis, Reinert argues, represents a departure from traditional development economics to ‘development aid strategy’, and comes at a time when the world has long been dominated by Washington Consensus policies pushing for market liberalisation. Compared to the first decades after the Second World War, the growth record of this neo-liberal period has been dismal, he notes, especially in Africa. However, the reviewer expresses some concern that the book appears to defend the past policies of the World Bank, with the most salient misinterpretation of history being Collier’s presentation of the successes of China and India as a result of the policies of the Washington Institutions, when in fact their success was the result of actually not following the policies and rather opening their markets gradually. Collier tends to reverse the directions of the arrows of causality and even to disregard co-evolution of economic structure and institutions. As a former employee of the Washington Institutions responsible for enforcing neo-liberalism, the reviewer concludes that he attempts to cover up the past rather than present new constructive insights, and the book contains more descriptions of symptoms of poverty than of its root causes.

Review of incorporation of essential nutrition actions into Public Health Programs in Ethiopia
Jennings J, Hirbaye MB: FANTA, January 2008

The Essential Nutrition Actions package is an approach to expand the coverage of seven affordable and evidence-based actions to improve the nutritional status of women and children, especially those under two years of age. The Food and Nutrition Technical Assisstance Project (FANTA)'s Review of Incorporation of Essential Nutrition Actions into Public Health Programs in Ethiopia found that the approach has been incorporated into the Ethiopia Federal Ministry of Health system and multilateral and NGO programming, however, improved training and other steps are necessary to further institutionalise the approach. The review, requested by USAID/Ethiopia, examined a number of facilitating and inhibiting factors to ENA integration in the context of Ethiopia’s health system.

Right to sanitation, a distinct human right
Heller L; Sadi W: United Nations Human Rights Office of the Commissioner, New York, December 2015

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the human right to water and sanitation, Léo Heller, and the Chair of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Waleed Sadi, welcomed the explicit recognition of the ‘human right to sanitation’ as a distinct right, together with the ‘human right to safe drinking water’ by the UN General Assembly in December. Over 2.5 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation - the sanitation target under Goal 7 has been missed by one of the widest margins of all the 18 targets under the Millennium Development Goals. One billion people practise open defecation, nine out of ten in rural areas across the world. The experts explained that while sanitation does not necessarily have to be water-borne, governments tend to focus on this type, rather than on-site sanitation such as pit latrines and septic tanks, which are still widely used. As a result, individual households which rely on on-site sanitation often have to operate the entire system themselves, including collection and disposal, without government support. “The right to sanitation also requires privacy and dignity,” the experts stressed. In the UN General Assembly resolution, adopted by consensus on 17 December 2015, Member States recognized that ‘the human right to sanitation entitles everyone, without discrimination, to have physical and affordable access to sanitation, in all spheres of life, that is safe, hygienic, secure, socially and culturally acceptable and that provides privacy and ensures dignity.’ “We urge all Member States, in both their national budgeting and international development cooperation, to target the allocation of resources to sanitation in particular to the most marginalised and disadvantaged groups and individuals, as those living in urban informal settlements and in rural areas,” the experts said.

Rising food prices hit Africa’s poorest again
Rowling M: Amandala Publishers, 1 September 2010

Consumer anxieties over the rising cost of food in rich and poor countries alike are stoking fears of social unrest in impoverished parts of the world once again. On 1 September 2010, at least six people - including two children - were killed during violent demonstrations over soaring prices for basic necessities, including bread and fuel, in and around Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, one of Africa's poorest countries. The government has increased bread prices by 30% and protestors complained that they are struggling to feed themselves and their families. The violence echoes the food price crisis of 2007-2008, which helped push the number of hungry people in the world above a billion, and sparked protests and riots in nearly 40 countries. Surging wheat prices - mainly due to Russian restrictions on sales following a major drought there - drove international food prices up 5% in August, the biggest month-on-month increase since November 2009, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). The FAO's Food Price Index - a basket of meat, dairy, cereals, oils, fats and sugar - has reached its highest level since September 2008, but is still 38% below its peak in June 2008. The FAO says the forecast for world cereal production this year has been lowered by 41 million tons to 2,238 million tons since June, but that would still be the third highest annual amount on record and above the five-year average.

Rising through cities? A look at Ghana
Paller J: Africa Research Institute, 9 June 2015

A new report by the World Bank- Rising through Cities in Ghana-analyses the rapid transformation of a country whose urban population has grown from 4 million in 1984 to more than 14 million today. 51% of Ghanaians now live in cities. Over the same period annual GDP growth has averaged 5.7%, the number of industrial and service jobs has increased by 21% and the capital city, Accra, has registered a 20% reduction in poverty. In August 2014, a fiscal debt crisis forced the government to request financial assistance from the International Monetary Fund. In May 2015, Accra residents peacefully protested the failure to resolve a three-year long electric power crisis that has sapped businesses and hindered economic growth. The World Bank has presented a report with data on urban development in Ghana and this paper provides a critical analysis of the report and a link to the original publication.

Rural areas in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa: The right to access safe drinking water and sanitation denied?
Fobosi S: Consultancy Africa Intelligence, 24 January 2013

This paper critically analyses the denial of the right of access to safe drinking water and sanitation. In so doing, it engages with the debate about whether access to water is a human right, using the situation in the rural areas of the Eastern Cape Province as a case study. Water in rural areas of the Eastern Cape continues to be regarded as a scarce resource, while at the same time the Constitution asserts that everyone has a right to access sufficient water and sanitation. The author argues that it is the duty of SA’s Government to work effectively for the progressive realisation of the right to access sufficient water and sanitation in rural areas. It should prioritise improvement of access to water in those areas where there is greatest need. Water sources must be as close as possible to households and water should be available on a daily basis. It should be as accessible and affordable as possible, particularly for the most marginalised and vulnerable members of SA society. An adequate policy should also be developed and monitored to prevent pollution of water resources and encourage water conservation.

SADC heads of state and government summit on agriculture and food security

The Summit of Heads of State and Government of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) on Agriculture and Food Security was held in Dar es Salaam, United Republic of Tanzania on 15 May 2004, and was chaired by His Excellency, Benjamin W. Mkapa, President of the United Republic of Tanzania. The Summit was held under the theme: Enhancing Agriculture and Food Security for Poverty Reduction in the SADC Region.
In his official opening statement, President Benjamin Mkapa of Tanzania, the Chairperson of SADC underlined the need for the region to continue to fight together for economic liberation of Southern Africa, especially in finding a lasting solution to the pressing questions of food security and sustainable poverty reduction.

Further details: /newsletter/id/30512
Safe and inclusive cities survey
Institute of Environmental Studies, University of Zimbabwe, 2015

The proportion of people worldwide living in urban areas has been increasing over the past century. Southern Africa is one of the least urbanised but fastest urbanising region. The pace of urbanisation in sub-Saharan Africa is twice the global average, making it the highest in the world. The urban population annual growth rate for the region is pegged at 3.75%. South Africa and Botswana have urban populations of more than 60% and Zimbabwe 33%. The survey was conducted in 4 purposively sampled urban high density suburbs. A multi-stage random sampling was then used to select households in the 4 suburbs. The sampling frame for selecting households was obtained from ZIMSTAT, the country’s statistical office. Data was collected over a period of a week in each of the sampled suburbs. During the week the enumerators would conduct household interviews in the Enumeration Areas (EAs). Household questionnaire were used to collected data from the sampled households. The questionnaire covered: characteristics of household members; availability of and access to shelter, water and sanitation; energy sources; income sources; assets. Results shows that where the council provided the houses, the critical services were provided and water, electricity and sanitation were not an issue. The urban councils developed the properties, but their role was not clear in the new urban landscape. Issues of restitution in the event of evictions in these areas were grey areas and people did not know where to go to get assistance when evicted, to where to access legal advice. Residents wanted advice on issues to do with access to land for vending, law enforcement and women empowerment, on land tenure and how to get title deeds. Most lease agreements and title deeds were in the name of the husband, giving men more access to land for housing than women.

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