水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH):全球健康与发展部门的演变。

IF 7.1 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH BMJ Global Health Pub Date : 2024-10-04 DOI:10.1136/bmjgh-2024-015367
Sara de Wit, Euphrasia Luseka, David Bradley, Joe Brown, Jayant Bhagwan, Barbara Evans, Matthew C Freeman, Guy Howard, Isha Ray, Ian Ross, Sheillah Simiyu, Oliver Cumming, Clare I R Chandler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管取得了一些进展,但在许多国家,到 2030 年普及安全饮用水、环境卫生和个人卫生(讲卫生运动)--可持续发展目标 6--仍然是一个遥远的前景。讲卫生运动部门的决策者和执行者面临着开辟新道路的挑战。本研究旨在确定该部门的核心导向主题,这些主题是过去进程的遗留问题,可为其未来提供启示。我们查阅了全球政策、科学和计划文件,并进行了 19 次专家访谈,以追踪全球讲卫生运动七十年来的发展历程。随着关注、专业知识和资源从高收入国家向低收入国家的跨国流动,讲卫生运动部门在几十年的国际卫生与发展制度化进程中不断发展:(1)关注技术(技术化);(2)寻求通用的解决方案(通用化);(3)试图让接受者对环境健康负责(责任化);(4)围绕可量化的结果制定计划(度量化)。讲卫生运动部门对这些核心主题的新承诺反映了卫生与发展领域的一种务实反应,即把贫困和社会不平等非政治化,以便能够采取行动。这引发了关于哪些潜在解决方案被掩盖的问题,这种认识可以被理解为 "不舒服的知识"--那些不得不为人所知的知识,它们与人们对严重不平等、预算缩减以及可能取得的成果与已经取得的成果之间的差距的担忧产生了共鸣。
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Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH): the evolution of a global health and development sector.

Despite some progress, universal access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) by 2030-a remit of Sustainable Development Goal 6-remains a distant prospect in many countries. Policy-makers and implementers of the WASH sector are challenged to track a new path. This research aimed to identify core orienting themes of the sector, as legacies of past processes, which can provide insights for its future. We reviewed global policy, science and programmatic documents and carried out 19 expert interviews to track the evolution of the global WASH sector over seven decades. We situated this evolution in relation to wider trends in global health and development over the same time period.With transnational flows of concern, expertise and resources from high-income to lower-income countries, the WASH sector evolved over decades of international institutionalisation of health and development with (1) a focus on technologies (technicalisation), (2) a search for generalised solutions (universalisation), (3) attempts to make recipients responsible for environmental health (responsibilisation) and (4) the shaping of programmes around quantifiable outcomes (metricisation). The emergent commitment of the WASH sector to these core themes reflects a pragmatic response in health and development to depoliticise poverty and social inequalities in order to enable action. This leads to questions about what potential solutions have been obscured, a recognition which might be understood as 'uncomfortable knowledge'-the knowns that have had to be unknown, which resonate with concerns about deep inequalities, shrinking budgets and the gap between what could and has been achieved.

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来源期刊
BMJ Global Health
BMJ Global Health Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
4.90%
发文量
429
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: BMJ Global Health is an online Open Access journal from BMJ that focuses on publishing high-quality peer-reviewed content pertinent to individuals engaged in global health, including policy makers, funders, researchers, clinicians, and frontline healthcare workers. The journal encompasses all facets of global health, with a special emphasis on submissions addressing underfunded areas such as non-communicable diseases (NCDs). It welcomes research across all study phases and designs, from study protocols to phase I trials to meta-analyses, including small or specialized studies. The journal also encourages opinionated discussions on controversial topics.
期刊最新文献
The impact of a multi-faceted intervention on non-prescription dispensing of antibiotics by urban community pharmacies in Indonesia: a mixed methods evaluation. Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH): the evolution of a global health and development sector. Cost-effectiveness of surgical interventions in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review and critical analysis of recent evidence. Learning from the Montreal Protocol to improve the global governance of antimicrobial resistance. Leveraging investments, promoting transparency and mobilising communities: a qualitative analysis of news articles about how the Ebola outbreak informed COVID-19 response in five African countries.
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