
Posted
by Geronimo_Apache
on April 03, 2008
Rural Alaska Natives at risk due to lack of in-home water
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Filed Under:
Health
Alaska Natives who live in rural homes without running water are more
likely to suffer from respiratory and skin infections, according to a
study released on Tuesday.
While in-house water is enjoyed by 99.4 percent of U.S. homes,
only about 84 percent of rural Alaskan homes have complete sanitation
services. Of the Alaska Native homes surveyed in the study, only 73
percent had water service.
The disparity was correlated to disproportionately high rates
of certain diseases among rural Alaska Natives. In some villages,
infants were 11 times as likely and elders were more than twice as
likely to be hospitalized for health problems.
Study authors warned that the data doesn't prove that
inadequate sanitation services caused respiratory and skin infections.
But when they looked at villages with the lowest level of water
services, they found higher rates for respiratory infections among
infants and for skin and soft-tissue infections among adults.
And in particular region with the lowest level of in-home water
service, more than a quarter of all infants are hospitalized each year
for influenza or for pneumonia. Infant pneumonia can lead to lifelong
respiratory problems.
"Access to clean water for hand washing and hygiene is
extremely important to preventing disease," said author Thomas
Hennessy, M.D., director of Arctic Investigation Programs at the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
"Without better access to in-home water for hand washing and hygiene,
Alaska Natives will continue to face higher rates of largely
preventable infections."
Despite the clear benefits of in-home water service, federal funding for sanitation facilities construction has flat-lined under the Bush administration. The fiscal year 2009
budget seeks $94 million for the program, the same level as 2008 and
2007.
"What we have in many of our villages, still, unfortunately, is a system we refer to as the honey-bucket system," Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), the vice chair of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee said in January during consideration of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act.
"It is not a very refined system. In fact, it is a system that,
for those of us in the state, we look at with shame and say: For Alaska
Natives, for Alaskans to have to rely on this as their sanitation
system is offensive," she added.
The study is being published by the American Journal of Public Health. It was the result of a two-year collaboration between the CDC, the
Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium and the
Indian Health Service.
Relevant Documnents:
CDC Press Release |
Study Abstract |
Full Article [requires purchase or subscription] FY2009 Budget Documents:
HHS
In Brief | GPRA
Performance | More
IHS Documents Related Stories:
IHS budget sees cut in final year of Bush era (2/6)