The Need For #WorldToiletDay In India
Toilets are something we use every day be it at home, school, or work. Still, 40% of the world’s population do not have toilets. Safe and hygienic toilets are a must for human well-being. Tragically, 2.3 billion people still lack basic sanitation services that can lead to harmful diseases like typhoid, hepatitis, cholera, etc.
Since 2013, the United Nations has designated November 19 as the World Toilet Day in order to promote sanitization solutions and raise awareness worldwide. 1 out of 3 people worldwide don’t have access to hygienic toilet facilities. For solving this problem, the United Nations in their Sustainable Development Goals had included “access to clean toilets”. The goal is that by 2030 hygiene and sanitation for all can be achieved.
Sanitation for Health
At the point when you consider developments that changed human wellbeing, you may consider penicillin, immunizations, or present-day medicines like chemotherapy. However, toilets have done a mind-blowing add up to improve wellbeing and health and keep on changing lives in numerous spots.
The unsafe removal of human waste can spread sickness quickly, attacking homes, schools, clinics, and other public spaces. In numerous affluent countries, diarrhea is a minor and embarrassing disease. Sanitary Plumbing and toilets are the basic solutions for an amazing medical condition.
Women’s Safety and Education
The safety and education of women go hand in hand with the availability of hygienic toilets. There are still many places in India where there are no toilets or sanitary facilities due to which the women need to travel to someplace that has a toilet or relieve themselves in some isolated, private place. This situation puts them at risk of harassment and sexual violence. In small towns and villages, the girls are stopped from attending school when they start menstruating as there are no proper toilets.
What’s more, World Toilet Day helps in promoting economic opportunity through the construction of hygienic toilets and facilities. Till India gets hygienic toilets for the whole population, we as responsible citizens should take care of the hygiene and sanitization of the toilets that we use and make it neat and clean for the use of the person after us.
Source: https://time.com/3942630/toilets-who-unicef-report/