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Poor sanitation is linked to transmission of serious diseases, it can undermine individual dignity and safety, and it affects social and economic development. In 2022, only 57% of the global population could access safely managed sanitation services.
In this cross-journal Collection, we present articles that explore all parts of sanitation research, including public health aspects, sustainable management, technology development and implementation, and environmental, social and technical challenges. We welcome submissions of articles that can help further our understanding and/or offer solutions to best address the global sanitation crisis.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 6 - Clean water and sanitation for all.
China’s history of large-scale water, sanitation and clean energy investments offers promising insights into the development of new interventions to reduce linear growth faltering among children and adolescents.
This Review identifies factors that lead to ‘unsafely managed sanitation’ in the United States, the specific types of access, and obstacles to characterizing and addressing the problem.
Access to sanitation is a fundamental right that is still missing, especially in many parts of low-income countries. This Perspective focuses on the impact of unclean school latrines on child health.
Greenhouse-gas emissions from the sanitation-service chain in Kampala may represent more than half of the total city-level emissions according to a whole-system analysis.
SDG 6.3 targets to half the proportion of untreated wastewater discharged to the environment by 2030 will substantially improve water quality globally, but a high-resolution surface water quality model suggests key thresholds will still not be met in regions with limited existing wastewater treatment.
Jan Kloppenborg Møller & Goran Goranović and colleagues introduce a data-driven twin methodology which balances physical knowledge with uncertainty quantifications. The approach makes it suited to application of real world problems with inherent unknowns. They demonstrate its application in the modelling and control of membrane water ultrafiltration
Qasmieh et al. estimate SARS-CoV-2 prevalence and the frequency of related public health outcomes in New York City in April/May 2022, via a cross-sectional survey of 1030 adults. Their findings suggest SARS-CoV-2 prevalence during the BA.2/BA.2.12.1 surge in New York City may have been underestimated by routine surveillance.
Roederer et al. estimate uptake of COVID-19 vaccines amongst migrants, homeless and precariously housed people in two regions of France with cross-sectional survey data. They also report sociodemographic factors and reasons associated with (non-)vaccination.
Armstrong et al. describe how rates of obesity and hypertension differ across three sub-populations of Brazil, including two under-studied Indigenous groups. The more urbanized cultures experience more obesity and hypertension, suggesting urbanization impacts cardiovascular health.
Holm et al. present a SARS-CoV-2 surveillance model linking hospitalization, seroprevalence, and wastewater concentrations. They fit this model to epidemic data from Kentucky, USA, to generate counterfactual scenarios highlighting the plausible effects of vaccination and changes in dynamics due to emergence of new variants.