1 research outputs found
COVID-19 pandemic in Africa: Is it time for water, sanitation and hygiene to climb up the ladder of global priorities?
The authors would like to thank the authors of the freely-usable images
from Unsplash and Pixnio included in the Graphical Abstract:
photos by Janice-Haney Carr and Dr. Ray Butler (USCDCP), USCDCP
and Crystal Thompsom (USAID) on Pixnio; photos by CDC, UN COVID-
19 response and Raymond Hui on Unsplash.Wewould also like to thank
the reviewers for their comments and keen interest in this article.In the current pandemic context, it is necessary to remember the lessons learned from previous outbreaks in
Africa, where the incidence of other diseases could rise if most resources are directed to tackle the emergency.
Improving the access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) could be a win-win strategy, because the lack
of these services not only hampers the implementation of preventive measures against SARS-CoV-2 (e.g. proper
handwashing), but it is also connected to high mortality diseases (for example, diarrhoea and lower respiratory
infections (LRI)). This study aims to build on the evidence-based link between other LRI andWASH as a proxy for
exploring the potential vulnerability of African countries to COVID-19, as well as the role of other socioeconomic
variables such as financial sources or demographic factors. The selected methodology combines several machine
learning techniques to single out the most representative variables for the analysis, classify the countries according
to their capacity to tackle public health emergencies and identify behavioural patterns for each group. Besides,
conditional dependences between variables are inferred through a Bayesian network. Results show a
strong relationship between low access toWASH services and high LRI mortality rates, and that migrant remittances
could significantly improve the access to healthcare and WASH services. However, the role of Official
Development Assistance (ODA) in enhancing WASH facilities in the most vulnerable countries cannot be
disregarded, but it is unevenly distributed: for each 50–100 US toWASH ranges between 48% (Western Africa) and 8% (Central Africa)