MANILA, Philippines, 19 November 2020
The world is alarmingly off-track to deliver sanitation for all by 2030. Unfortunately, the Philippines is on the same trajectory. At the current rate of global progress, safely managed sanitation for all will not be a reality until the twenty-second century.
Around 50.3 million Filipinos (around 10 million families) do not have access to safely managed sanitation services, and of these some 24 million use limited/unimproved toilets or none at all. Safely managed sanitation means the use of improved toilet facilities which are not shared with other households and where the excreta are safely disposed on-site, or are transported and treated off-site.
“Implementing the Sustainable Development Goal on sanitation is an investment but inaction brings us even greater costs. Untreated waste from poor sanitation services has negative effects on the environment and can spread diseases that cause poor health and nutrition, loss of income, decreased productivity and missed educational opportunities,” said Dr Rabindra Abeyasinghe, World Health Organization (WHO) Representative in the Philippines.
“Unlike the COVID-19 pandemic, our problem in sanitation is readily solvable. Technologies and approaches are available and just waiting for us to make the first step to invest. Only by leveraging government resources with household investments and private sector support would we be able to reach as many communities in the fastest time possible. We have seen this partnership at work for COVID-19, we must do the same for sanitation,” said Health Secretary, Dr. Francisco T. Duque III.
To reach the national targets of universal access to sanitation, an average investment of PhP 30 billion per year is needed. This is 13% of the additional internal revenue allotment that local government units will receive by 2022, valued at PhP225.3 billion per year.
“Let us not wait for another outbreak or pandemic before we prioritize sanitation. The recent typhoons in the Philippines have shown how vulnerable our toilets and the sanitation systems they are connected to are. This impacts children greatly and will only get worse as the impacts of climate change increase. Achieving universal and sustainable access to safely managed sanitation may be difficult, but it is not impossible. It begins with strong political will at both the national and local government levels to mobilize the investments required, build a larger workforce with better skills, and encourage innovation and data-based decision-making,” said Oyunsaikhan Dendevnorov, UNICEF Representative.
With the theme “Toilets for Every Juan: Bida ang Pamilyang Gumagamit ng Kubeta!,” for this year’s World Toilet Day event, DOH, in partnership with UNICEF and the World Health Organization, encourage local governments and key stakeholders to make every effort to ensure that sanitation coverage extends to entire communities in all settings and not just households.
In 2019, DOH issued the guidelines on implementing the Philippine Approach to Sustainable Sanitation (PhATSS) which assesses and certifies the level of sanitation services delivered by each local government unit.
Based on the 2019 Field Health Services Information System, one-third of the 42,046 barangays in the Philippines have been certified as having abandoned the practice of open defecation in their communities. Despite this progress, among 1,634 cities and municipalities in the country, only 6% have achieved municipal-wide Zero Open Defecation (ZOD) status (or Grade 1 sanitation certification).
Furthermore, Basic Sanitation Status (Grade 2 sanitation certification) has been given to over 300 barangays across the country and in two municipalities in Maguindanao, where improved sanitation facilities are now available not only in each household, but also in every public institution and public place in the communities.
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Department of Health
Media Relations Unit
Tel. No.: (632) 651-7800 local 1126/1136