Access to water and sanitation among people with disabilities: results from cross-sectional surveys in Bangladesh, Cameroon, India and Malawi.

Islay Mactaggart ORCID logo; Wolf-Peter Schmidt ORCID logo; Kristof Bostoen; Joseph Chunga; Lisa Danquah; Amal Krishna Halder; Saira Parveen Jolly; Sarah Polack ORCID logo; Mahfuzar Rahman; Marielle Snel; +2 more... Hannah Kuper ORCID logo; Adam Biran; (2018) Access to water and sanitation among people with disabilities: results from cross-sectional surveys in Bangladesh, Cameroon, India and Malawi. BMJ open, 8 (6). e020077-. ISSN 2044-6055 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020077
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OBJECTIVES: To assess access to adequate water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) among people with disabilities at the household and individual level. DESIGN: Cross-sectional surveys. SETTING: Data were included from five district-level or regional-level surveys: two in Bangladesh (Bangladesh-1, Bangladesh-2), and one each in Cameroon, Malawi and India. PARTICIPANTS: 99 252 participants were sampled across the datasets (range: 3567-75 767), including 2494 with disabilities (93-1374). OUTCOME: Prevalence of access to WASH at household and individual level. DATA ANALYSIS: Age/sex disaggregated disability prevalence estimates were calculated accounting for survey design. The Unicef/WHO Joint Monitoring Programme definitions were used to classify facilities as improved/unimproved. Multivariable logistic regression was undertaken to compare between households with/without a person with a disability, and to identify predictors of access among people with disabilities. RESULTS: There were no differences in access to improved sanitation or water sources between households with/without members with disabilities across the datasets. In Bangladesh-2, households including a person with a disability were more likely to share facilities with other households (OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.1 to 1.5). Households with people with disabilities were more likely to spend >30 min (round-trip) collecting drinking water than households without in both Cameroon (OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.0 to 3.4) and India (OR 2.3, 95% CI 1.2 to 4.7). Within households, people with disabilities reported difficulties collecting water themselves (23%-80% unable to) and accessing the same sanitation facilities as other household members, particularly without coming into contact with faeces (up to 47% in Bangladesh-2). These difficulties were most marked for people with more severe impairments. CONCLUSIONS: People with disabilities may not have poorer access to WASH at the household level, but may have poorer quality of access within their households. Further programmatic work is needed to ensure WASH facilities are inclusive of people with disabilities.


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