If the central message of the need for more toilets to stop open defecation in India got lost in the “more toilets than temples” controversy in 2013, the joint estimate for the year 2011 by the World Health Organization and UNICEF of the number of people who defecate in the open is yet another reminder of why India has to address this issue on a war-footing. In the absence of toilets, more than 620 million people, or over half of India’s population, are forced to practise open defecation. This is yet another development index where India’s extremely poor performance has ‘helped’ it retain the dubious distinction of having the most people in the world defecating in the open. That the State of Bihar alone has a higher rate than any other country in the world to continue this practice speaks volumes of how much the country lags behind. While the government’s mission to rid the country of this practice by 2022 and 50 per cent of all gram panchayats by 2017 is laudable, it is an ambitious goal. For instance, if nearly 74 per cent did not have access to toilets in 1990, the figure declined to only about 50 per cent in 2011.
Besides other countries, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Nepal have achieved
the most improvement during 1990-2011. By reducing it from 32 per cent to 4 per
cent during 1990-2011, Bangladesh has fared extremely well. The reduction has
been about 50 per cent in the case of Nepal (84 to 43 per cent) and Pakistan
(52 to 23 per cent) during the same period. But the rate of decline may
accelerate in the years to come with the government increasing last year the
amount to be spent for household toilets in rural areas from Rs.4,600 to
Rs.10,000.
Financial incentives alone cannot end or drastically reduce the
percentage of people continuing with this practice. If other countries have
achieved it, there is no reason why India cannot do it. The need to
aggressively address the issue cannot be overemphasized as open defecation
affects children, especially those below five, the most. This practice causes
diarrhoea, one of the most common communicable diseases in India and a number
one killer of young children. Frequent diarrhoeal events result in
under-nutrition. That explains why nearly 50 per cent of under-five children in
rural areas are stunted, wasted, and underweight. Children weakened by this
disease are in turn more prone to opportunistic infections such as pneumonia.
Now, a World Bank report released recently goes beyond the well-known physical
impact. It found a link between open defecation and reduced cognitive
achievements
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Please comment and suggest how people who prefer open fields for defecation be persuaded to build and utilize latrines.