The theme for Rio 2010, The right to the City– bridging the urban divide is in harmony with UN-HABITAT’s flagship report, State of the World’s Cities 2010-2011.

Link: http://www.unhabitat.org/categories.asp?catid=584

Concepts that will drive the discussions in Rio include the right to the city, bridging urban income gaps, reducing inequality and poverty, participatory democracy, cultural diversity in cities, women-friendly cities, sustainable urban development equal access to shelter, health, water, sanitation and infrastructure services. And of course the right to the inclusive city.

Under the Millennium Development Goals for poverty reduction by the year 2015, governments agreed that these combined with good urban planning, and good governance are the best way foreward for a better urban future.

An agenda of events and discussions will bring to life the ideas drawn from concept documents by international specialists in each of the strategic areas. The idea is to improve the debate at the main sessions and networking events. In this way, the Forum will promote a dialogue and build common commitments that result in new solutions for our cities.

To rethink our urban utopia is the main task. Our challenge now is to learn with the rest of the world, taking into account the needs of our partners so that best practices and actions are multiplied in every city, creating a better world where everyone can live with dignity, respect and citizenship.

For Pennies, a Disposable Toilet That Could Help Grow Crops

An architect and professor in Stockholm has developed a biodegradable bag that could serve as a single-use toilet in the developing world. A Swedish entrepreneur is trying to market and sell a biodegradable plastic bag that acts as a single-use toilet for urban slums in the developing world.

Once used, the bag can be knotted and buried, and a layer of urea crystals breaks down the waste into fertilizer, killing off disease-producing pathogens found in feces.

The bag, called the Peepoo, is the brainchild of Anders Wilhelmson, an architect and professor in Stockholm.

“Not only is it sanitary,” said Mr. Wilhelmson, who has patented the bag, “they can reuse this to grow crops.”

In his research, he found that urban slums in Kenya, despite being densely populated, had open spaces where waste could be buried.

He also found that slum dwellers there collected their excrement in a plastic bag and disposed of it by flinging it, calling it a “flyaway toilet” or a “helicopter toilet.”

This inspired Mr. Wilhelmson to design the Peepoo, an environmentally friendly alternative that he is confident will turn a profit.

“People will say, ‘It’s valuable to me, but well priced,’ ” he said.

He plans to sell it for about 2 or 3 cents — comparable to the cost of an ordinary plastic bag.

In the developing world, an estimated 2.6 billion people, or about 40 percent of the earth’s population, do not have access to a toilet, according to United Nations figures.

It is a public health crisis: open defecation can contaminate drinking water, and an estimated 1.5 million children worldwide die yearly from diarrhea, largely because of poor sanitation and hygiene.

To mitigate this, the United Nations has a goal to reduce by half the number of people without access to toilets by 2015.

The market for low-cost toilets in the developing world is about a trillion dollars, according to Jack Sim, founder of the World Toilet Organization, a sanitation advocacy group.

As far as toilets go, “the people in the middle class have reached saturation in consumption,” said Mr. Sim, who calls himself a fan of the Peepoo. “This has created a new need, urgently, of looking for a new customer.”

Since 2001, his organization has held an annual World Toilet Summit, and Mr. Sims said he was excited that in recent years there had been an emergence of entrepreneurs devising low-cost solutions.

At the 2009 meeting, Rigel Technology of Singapore unveiled a $30 toilet that separates solid and liquid waste, turning solid waste into compost. Sulabh International, an Indian nonprofit and the host of the World Toilet Summit in 2007, is promoting several low-cost toilets, including one that produces biogas from excrement. The gas can then be used in cooking.

But Therese Dooley, senior adviser on sanitation and hygiene for Unicef, said that inculcating sanitation habits was no easy task.

“It will take a large amount of behavior change,” Ms. Dooley said.

She added that while “the private sector can play a major role, it will never get to the bottom of the pyramid.”

A sizable population, poor and uneducated, will still be left without toilets, Ms. Dooley said, and nonprofits and governments will have to play a large role in distribution and education.

Meanwhile, Mr. Wilhelmson is pushing ahead with the Peepoo.

After successfully testing it for a year in Kenya and India, he said he planned to mass produce the bag this summer.

Source – New York Times

The first systematic study of surveillance techniques for the insect vector of Chagas disease in Amazonia, conducted by researchers from the Fiocruz Instituto Leônidas e Maria Deane, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and colleagues, concludes that tall palm trees with large amounts of debris on their crowns and stems should be targets for disease surveillance and control.

Chagas disease, caused by a parasite transmitted by blood-sucking bugs, results in severe heart, digestive and neurological lesions. Chagas disease is endemic in Latin America where Trypanosoma cruzi infects about 7.5 million people. “The burden of Chagas disease in the Latin American-Caribbean region is still consistently larger than the combined burden of malaria, leprosy, the leishmaniases, lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, viral hepatitides B and C, dengue, and the major intestinal nematode infections,” write the authors of the study, published Mar. 2, 2010 in the open-access journal, PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases.

However, in Amazonia, where there are at least 100,000 infected people, insecticide-based control is not feasible because the insects seldom breed within houses. Most transmission occurs when triatomine bugs emerge from their natural habitats–usually palm trees–and fly into houses, attack rural workers or contaminate food or food-processing equipment.

Ascertaining whether a palm tree is infested is problematic. The small, cryptically-colored bugs easily go undetected. The authors asked whether all palms are equally likely to harbor triatomine bug colonies – while explicitly acknowledging that no detection technique works perfectly. Then, they determined whether palm infestation rates were associated with environmental differences at the regional, landscape, or individual palm tree level. Their study also asked whether palm tree management could lower palm infestation rates.

Building upon analytical methods recently developed by wildlife biologists, the study emphasizes that a disease vector is not necessarily absent from a site where it was not detected during a survey. Such ‘detection failures’ are pervasive – a feature that is inherent to all vector studies. The robust methodology described in this paper is generally suited for investigating vector occurrence and ecology when detection is imperfect.

Based upon this study, vector surveillance teams can now draw upon clearly defined detection criteria. Surveillance teams should consider the circumstances at the origin of a disease outbreak or an isolated acute case. A ‘high-risk’ palm tree will very likely be found near the residence of the patients or near an unprotected fruit press used to prepare contaminated juice. These recommendations are consistent across different Amazon sub-regions and landscapes. Finally, the study suggests that simple environmental management practices, such as removing organic debris from the crowns and stems of peri-domestic palms, may substantially reduce the risk of vector-human contact.

Source – redorbit

More than 100 000 households, or half a million people, in Cape Town do not have access to basic sanitation. According to a research report by international initiative Water Dialogues South Africa, about 37 percent of the 128 000 city households living in informal settlements have no access to any sanitation system.

While more than two thirds of these residents have been supplied with bucket sanitation options, including the black bucket and Porta-Pottis toilets, the report notes that the servicing of these toilets falls “far short” of required standards.  Karen Goldberg, who prepared the report, said the figure of 100 000 households with no sanitation at all was not reported in any of the city’s official reports. 

The city’s reported sanitation backlog of 47 650 households only refers to households without any form of sanitation. The 80 500 that reportedly have some form of sanitation have to rely on the bucket system, which is not considered a basic form of sanitation. “It is clear from the research that the data available is not being properly interrogated. This is leading to misreporting which has significant implications for planning.” The city has about 3,3 million people or 884 000 households and population growth is estimated to be 1,65 percent annually.

This includes an influx of about 48 000 people each year to the province. The city has been under fire recently for its provision of basic services. A furore erupted when the ANC Youth League complained about open toilets in Khayelitsha. The city said there was an agreement with residents that they would build the enclosures if the council provided the toilets.

The report criticised the city for “falling short” of its monitoring and regulation responsibilities. Goldberg said the officials in charge of the contracts did not make sure that the service providers adhered to their contracts. “The only regulation that currently appears to be occurring is through reporting mechanisms which is grossly insufficient and open to abuse.” Goldberg said the city had an “ad hoc” approach to sanitation service provision and that planning for informal settlements was “haphazard”.

She said this was partly because of the city’s perception that informal settlements were temporary and not worthy of long-term investment or planning. She said the city’s strategy was to provide emergency levels of service to all informal settlements, and to improve these services over time. Goldberg’s report noted that only 2,6 percent or 64 staff of the city’s water and sanitation department worked in informal settlements.

Source – iol

Poor Ugandans living in rural and urban areas suffering from chronic under-nutrition will have access to two bio-fortified banana cultivars – matooke and sweet bananas by 2016.

Prof. Wilberforce Tushemereirwe, the National Agricultural Research Organisation (NARO) national banana research programme leader said this.

“For a long time, the Ministry of Health identified the most critical nutritional micronutrients as Vitamin A and iron,” he recalled.

Iron deficiency anaemia is at about 73% of children under five years, 50% of pregnant women and accounts for about 30% of maternal deaths.

Children below the age of five are stunted due to malnutrition.

The recent Uganda Demographic and Health Survey shows the consequences of long-term nutritional deprivation can culminate in ill health and death.

“Iodine was one of the nutritional problems but was wiped out after the ministry made sure that all imported salt is iodized,” said Tushemereirwe.

A similar programme has been successfully done in Australia on Cavendish bananas where they have bio-fortified rice with pro-vitamin A using a gene from maize.

“The soybean gene ‘Ferritin’ has been inserted in the banana cells to make protein that enhances the stores iron in banana fruit pulp,” said Dr. Geofrey Arinaitwe, the banana biofortification project co-principle investigator.

“Other genes inserted are from yellow maize and ‘Asupina’ banana cultivar from South East Asian Islands, all very rich in pro-vitamin A carotenoid content that is converted into vitamin A by our body,” he added.

Already, 132 different transgenic banana lines put out in the confined field trial have each been inserted with the gene independently.

Arinaitwe said this is the first time for Ugandans and Africa to develop genetically modified crops (Banana 21) to reach the stage of confined field trial.

After the bio-fortification research, pro-vitamin A and iron-rich bananas will go through food and environment safety assessments before they are released to farmers.

Uganda produces 10 million tonnes of banana annually, making her the world’s second largest banana producer after India.

Source – http://www.freshplaza.com/news_detail.asp?id=59903

Mumbai, March 2

After ratings for hospitals and Initial Public Offerings (IPO), now cities will get graded on how well they handle their public health and sanitation.

Cities will be colour graded on the sustainable handling of their waste, and the comparable data on different cities will be put in public domain by April-May, Mr A.K. Mehta, Joint Secretary with the Union Ministry of Urban Development, told Business Line.

Data from the cities will be bench marked on their solid waste collection and disposal, storm-water management, prevalence of open defecation, among other things.

Those cities with a population of over one lakh, by the 2001 census, will be graded along the parameters of output, process and outcome — indicators laid out by the National Urban Sanitation Policy of 2008, he said.

The grading will show a city in poor light, if it has a red grade of less than 33 marks, indicating a public health and sanitation “emergency”. As a city’s sanitation environment improves, its grading moves up to black, then blue and at the top of the ladder is green, indicating a healthy and green city.

A good grading is an endorsement that the city is doing well and its systems work, and it could work as an indicator for investors evaluating locations to set up businesses, he agreed.

The programme is looking for a credible face to promote the better sanitation message, say public-health workers, some one like cricketing icon Sachin Tendulkar. Last month, Sachin batted for Brihan-Mumbai Municipal Corporation’s campaign to save water and in 2008, he was part of the United Nation’s Hand Washing campaign.

Grading

The Ministry has appointed AC Nielsen Development and Research Services and the Centre for Environment Planning Technology (CEPT) to undertake the grading of cities.

Expected to be a yearly exercise, an award is also to be given to the city that fares best in this public health exercise. But data tell a powerful story and apart from being a competitive exercise, cities can also learn from the insights different cities throw up, Mr Mehta added.

Responding to concerns that the sanitation data were provided by cities and their commissioners to the rating agencies, negating the independence of the assessment, Mr Mehta countered that the methodology was independent.

Samples would be taken from five public places and tested, he said, adding that authorities were best placed to identify these locations. Besides, getting municipal commissioners and others to participate also makes them own the entire process, he added.

Source – Business Line

WHO Bulletin, March 2010

Eco-bio-social determinants of dengue vector breeding: a multicountry study in urban and periurban Asia

Full-text: http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/88/3/09-067892.pdf (pdf, 493KB)

Natarajan Arunachalam, Susilowati Tana, Fe Espino, Pattamaporn Kittayapong, Wimal Abeyewickreme, Khin Thet Wai, Brij Kishore Tyagi, Axel Kroeger, Johannes Sommerfeld & Max Petzold

Objective – To study dengue vector breeding patterns under a variety of conditions in public and private spaces; to explore the ecological, biological and social (eco-bio-social) factors involved in vector breeding and viral transmission, and to define the main implications for vector control.

Methods – In each of six Asian cities or periurban areas, a team randomly selected urban clusters for conducting standardized household surveys, neighbourhood background surveys and entomological surveys. They collected information on vector breeding sites, people’s knowledge, attitudes and practices surrounding dengue, and the characteristics of the study areas. All premises were inspected; larval indices were used to quantify vector breeding sites, and pupal counts were used to identify productive water container types and as a proxy measure for adult vector abundance.

Findings – The most productive vector breeding sites were outdoor water containers, particularly if uncovered, beneath shrubbery and unused for at least one week. Peridomestic and intradomestic areas were much more important for pupal production than commercial and public spaces other than schools and religious facilities. A complex but non-significant association was found between water supply and pupal counts, and lack of waste disposal services was associated with higher vector abundance in only one site.  Greater knowledge about dengue and its transmission was associated with lower mosquito breeding and production. Vector control measures (mainly larviciding in one site) substantially reduced larval and pupal counts and “pushed” mosquito breeding to alternative containers.

Conclusion – Vector breeding and the production of adult Aedes aegypti are influenced by a complex interplay of factors. Thus, to achieve effective vector management, a public health response beyond routine larviciding or focal spraying is essential.

75,000 Residents Face Health Hazard
By: Edwin M. Fayia, III

MONROVIA – West Point, the densely populated slum community in Monrovia, has been enveloped by garbage and other waste matter, posing a health hazard to its residents.

An estimated 75,000 persons, predominantly women and children, live in the slum community.

During a three-day tour of the community, it was observed that the sanitation crisis in the area ranged from inadequate and insanitary latrines to mounting garbage and ignorance of basic sanitary regulations.

A West Point advocacy group, Youth Against Environmental Pollution (YAEP), told the Daily Observer during the tour that the health situation in the community is going from bad to worse. The youth organization called for urgent intervention by the central government and its development partners in arresting the sanitation crisis in the area.

The spokesman of YAEP, John Bawon Geegbae, 44, said his group, as a community-based organization, has been making efforts to draw the attention of relevant stakeholders to the sanitation problem in the community.

Geegbae also pointed out that they had sent several communications to many environmental and health groups over the past eight months.

“But our requests have only fallen on deaf ears. Besides, we have carried out sustained awareness and sensitization [campaigns] on the importance of environmental cleanliness and garbage disposal in this community, yet the residents are not helping with the situation,” he disclosed.

The YAEP official also intimated, however, that the garbage-infested condition of West Point can no longer be handled by the residents. “It requires the concerted efforts and intervention of the Municipal Government of Monrovia and other stakeholders.”

He used the occasion to appeal to the Ministry of Health & Social Welfare through its Environmental and Occupational Health Division to help design programs aimed at addressing the West Point sanitation crisis.

Read More – http://www.liberianobserver.com/node/4770

HEALTH-BRAZIL: When the City Makes You Sick

RIO DE JANEIRO, Feb 22 (IPS) – Limiting your cholesterol through diet may not be enough to maintain cardiovascular health in polluted cities like São Paulo in Brazil: the particulates suspended in the air alter the molecular composition of LDL, popularly known as “bad cholesterol,” making it even more dangerous.

The structure of LDL (low density lipoprotein) facilitates the accumulation of fat in the arteries, in other words, arteriosclerosis. This process ultimately restricts blood flow and can damage vital organs like the heart and brain.

The study that confirmed this risk is the doctoral thesis of biomedical scientist Sandra Castro Soares, of the University of São Paulo’s medical school. The research was conducted using mice. But for the first time they were placed in the real environment, breathing the same air as humans, near a busy avenue in this densely populated city in southern Brazil.

One group of mice was exposed to smog on the streets, which comes mainly from vehicle exhaust, during their first four months of life – equivalent to 40 human years. Another group of mice was kept in chambers with filtered air.

The first group ended the period with symptoms like thickened arterial walls, altered LDL, and production of antibodies to fight that change – all of which are indicators of a higher risk of heart attack.

The problem lies with the microparticulates that “cross the nasal and pulmonary barriers, entering the blood system,” Soares explained in an interview with Tierramérica.

“They don’t change the quantity of fat, but rather its quality” of adhering to the artery walls, she said. The change attracts more antibodies, which in turn attract more LDL, in a vicious circle that aggravates the problem.

In the last few decades, São Paulo has cut in half the quantity of polluting particulates in the city air.

But the research revealed that even with the improvement, which meets the standard recommended by the World Health Organisation of less than 50 micrograms of particulate per cubic metre, the air is not clean enough, said Lucía García, who advised Soares on her thesis in the air pollution lab at the university.

The particulates are oxidants, and oxidised LDL intensifies arteriosclerosis, increasing vascular health risks for those who live in the world’s big cities. Even exercising, such as jogging, in polluted areas can be very bad for your health, García said.

In fact, there are many recent studies in São Paulo that reveal numerous and varied effects of urban pollution: more girls are born than boys, there are more premature births and underweight newborns, male infertility is on the rise, and deaths from respiratory illnesses are increasing. Childhood cancer and hypothyroidism are other possible consequences.

Low birth weight is not just a matter of size, but means “a less mature foetus,” with organs that are not fully developed, which can lead to future health problems or premature death, according to Dr. Paulo Saldiva, who coordinates the University of São Paulo’s (USP) air pollution lab.

The USP is today “among the five universities in the world producing the most knowledge” about the links between health and the environment, says Saldiva proudly, though he laments that the findings have had little influence on public policy in Brazil.

Air pollution as a serious public health matter has so far failed to mobilise the health authorities, who are more concerned about fighting infectious diseases like H1N1 influenza (swine flu), HIV/AIDS, and dengue, he said.

Furthermore, environmental officials and activists pay little attention to the relationship between the environment and human health, he added.

In contrast, the tobacco industry is apparently content with the conclusions about the effects of urban air pollution, because they can use them to play down the health effects of smoking, like lung cancer. But in any case, “cigarettes are worse for your health than smog,” the researcher stressed.

The problem is that while tobacco affects only those who decide to smoke or live with smokers, nobody can escape air pollution, Saldiva said. The poor are the most vulnerable to the risks because they travel for hours on buses on congested streets to get to their jobs, while the wealthy have their own enclosed cars with air conditioning, he pointed out.

Social inequalities compound other environmental injustices, given that the poorest of the poor live in unsuitable areas, vulnerable to floods and landslides, with a lack of clean water and heavy pollution, said Saldiva.

The situation is getting worse in São Paulo, where more cars are added each day to the six million vehicles circulating on the metropolitan area’s streets. This slows down traffic and forces people to breathe the polluted air for longer periods, increasing the risk of contracting one of the many pollution related diseases, he said.

The USP air pollution lab research is focusing now on studying the effects on people who spend a great deal of time in the more polluted areas of São Paulo, such as traffic controllers at the busiest intersections.

Particulate matter and “perhaps ozone” are the elements of greatest concern in terms of urban health, said Saldiva.

Source – http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=50420

Knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) relating to avian influenza in urban and rural areas of China

Studies have revealed that visiting poultry markets and direct contact with sick or dead poultry are significant risk factors for H5N1 infection, the practices of which could possibly be influenced by people’s knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAPs) associated with avian influenza (AI). To determine the KAPs associated with AI among the Chinese general population, a cross-sectional survey was conducted in China.

Methods: We used standardized, structured questionnaires distributed in both an urban area (Shenzhen, Guangdong Province; n=1,826) and a rural area (Xiuning, Anhui Province; n=2,572) using the probability proportional to size (PPS) sampling technique.

Results: Approximately three-quarters of participants in both groups requested more information about AI.

The preferred source of information for both groups was television. Almost three-quarters of all participants were aware of AI as an infectious disease; the urban group was more aware that it could be transmitted through poultry, that it could be prevented, and was more familiar with the relationship between AI and human infection.

The villagers in Xiuning were more concerned than Shenzhen residents about human AI viral infection. Regarding preventative measures, a higher percentage of the urban group used soap for hand washing whereas the rural group preferred water only.

Almost half of the participants in both groups had continued to eat poultry after being informed about the disease.

Conclusions: Our study shows a high degree of awareness of human AI in both urban and rural populations, and could provide scientific support to assist the Chinese government in developing strategies and health-education campaigns to prevent AI infection among the general population.

Author: Nijuan XiangYing ShiJiabing WuShunxiang ZhangMin YeZhibin PengLei ZhouHang ZhouQiaohong LiaoYang HuaiLeilei LiZhangda YuXiaowen ChengWeike SuXiaomin WuHanwu MaJianhua LuJeffrey McFarlandHongjie Yu

Credits/Source: BMC Infectious Diseases 2010, 1

Source – 7th Space