Moreland, L. (2016). Girls and WaSH: How WaSH in Schools Can Help to Address Gender Inequities. Solutions 7(6): 50-54. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/girls-and-wash-how-wash-in-schools-can-help-to-address-gender-inequities/
Perspectives Girls and WaSH: How WaSH in Schools Can Help to Address Gender Inequities by Leslie Moreland
WaterAid /James Kiyimba
Since Build Africa began working with The Kalampete Primary School in Kibuku District, Uganda, the improved access to sanitation facilities, hygiene education, and the ability to harvest water during rainy seasons has greatly increased attendance and performance.
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n 2015, 663 million people lacked improved drinking water sources and 2.4 billion lacked access to appropriate sanitation facilities.1 A recent UNICEF study showed that global access to water in schools is at 71 percent and sanitation access at 69 percent. For least-developed countries, this drops to appallingly lower coverage rates of 52 percent and 51 percent, respectively.2 The daily and long-term consequences of the burdens experienced by girls across the globe caused by a lack of safe water and underdeveloped sanitation and hygiene facilities are considerable. This situation is
particularly pronounced for young girls and female adolescents who often miss school because of a lack of access to safe and improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WaSH) facilities. While gender disaggregated data for availability of WaSH facilities in schools is limited, reports point to average sanitation coverage being five percent lower for girls than for boys, a critical factor in school attendance.1 Indeed, there is mounting evidence that access to safe water and improved sanitation and hygiene at schools reduces student absenteeism and improves achievement.3 Access to education is a
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catalyst for greater change, leading to decreased poverty rates, improved economic well-being, and better health. Women are often the primary caregivers in the household, and often ‘women’ are no more than young girls starting their journey into adolescence. Too often it is the girl-child who is kept at home to assist with the household chores, including collecting water for her family, while her brother or male family members attend school. Even for girls who continue to attend school, when they have their menses, they often stay at home for its duration due to a lack of adequate