REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh

<p>Currently 77% of Bangladesh healthcare facilities have improved on-premises water supply, but there is no systematic data on the quality of the water for drinking or providing care. In partnership with UNICEF Bangladesh, the REACH programme undertook a pilot study to examine water quality i...

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Main Author: REACH
Format: Internet publication
Language:English
Published: University of Oxford 2023
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author REACH
author_facet REACH
author_sort REACH
collection OXFORD
description <p>Currently 77% of Bangladesh healthcare facilities have improved on-premises water supply, but there is no systematic data on the quality of the water for drinking or providing care. In partnership with UNICEF Bangladesh, the REACH programme undertook a pilot study to examine water quality in 14 rural public hospitals across eight districts, for both drinking and use in care giving.</p> <p>The study demonstrates that water quality in hospitals is compromised by poorly maintained water systems in hospitals, as well as poor environmental hygiene, placing patients at risk of hospital acquired infections. It finds that water quality deteriorates from the source to the point of use, highlighting the need for proactive water safety plans for healthcare facilities, to deliver on infection prevention goals.</p> <p>The collaborative research is expanding water safety planning approaches for hospitals in Bangladesh, creating transformative change at the facility level and informing care policy at the national level.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:0fd44394-9ac0-4f0d-b6bb-e8f10776391a2024-09-02T11:58:38ZREACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in BangladeshInternet publicationhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_7ad9uuid:0fd44394-9ac0-4f0d-b6bb-e8f10776391aEnglishREACH_internet_publications_2024_09BulkUploadUniversity of Oxford2023REACH<p>Currently 77% of Bangladesh healthcare facilities have improved on-premises water supply, but there is no systematic data on the quality of the water for drinking or providing care. In partnership with UNICEF Bangladesh, the REACH programme undertook a pilot study to examine water quality in 14 rural public hospitals across eight districts, for both drinking and use in care giving.</p> <p>The study demonstrates that water quality in hospitals is compromised by poorly maintained water systems in hospitals, as well as poor environmental hygiene, placing patients at risk of hospital acquired infections. It finds that water quality deteriorates from the source to the point of use, highlighting the need for proactive water safety plans for healthcare facilities, to deliver on infection prevention goals.</p> <p>The collaborative research is expanding water safety planning approaches for hospitals in Bangladesh, creating transformative change at the facility level and informing care policy at the national level.</p>
spellingShingle REACH
REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh
title REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh
title_full REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh
title_fullStr REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh
title_short REACH Story of Change: Making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in Bangladesh
title_sort reach story of change making water safe for maternal and neonatal care in bangladesh
work_keys_str_mv AT reach reachstoryofchangemakingwatersafeformaternalandneonatalcareinbangladesh