Toilet's Day, lack of hygiene is increasing the number of deaths in the world

As with each time, this year, November 19, the United Nations Organization holds the World Tualite Day, which is used to provide sensationalizing messages for better hygiene. Worldwide, some 2.5 billion people use toilets outside every standard and more than 1 billion [...]
As with each time, this year, November 19, the United Nations Organization holds the World Tualite Day, which is used to provide sensationalizing messages for better hygiene.
Worldwide, about 2.5 billion people use toilets outside every standard, and more than 1 billion use open - air facilities for their needs.
Of 4 billion cases of diarrhea a year, more than 2 million end in death, most children. That is more than the number of deaths from AIDS and malaria combined.
In India, where some 550 million people use open space for poop, 45% of children are affected by infections resulting from lack of hygiene.
In most cases, sanitation is lacking, and people suffer for clean water, not only for hygiene but also for drinking.
According to studies by the UN's own organisms, the lack of toilets and the taking of different diseases reportedly caused most Indian children to not develop physically and remain very short.
Also in sub-Saharan Africa, UN experts estimate that a quarter of the population uses open countries for the poop process, mainly in rural areas.
Urbanization increased access to modern toilets, but increasing population numbers also produced increased transmission and toilet diseases, mainly public.
On this day, the UN and other international organisations have undertaken campaigns to ease the phenomenon slightly.










