Water Scarcity and Health

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Intro: Water Scarcity - Dripping Dilemma

  • Definition: Critical imbalance: available freshwater insufficient for human & ecological demands.
  • Types:
    • Physical (availability-limited): Common in arid/semi-arid regions; natural water resources unable to meet all demands.
      • Climate change impact: ↑extreme weather (droughts), altered precipitation, ↑evaporation, glacial melt.
    • Economic (access-limited): Sufficient water available, but poor governance, lack of investment in infrastructure, or inadequate human capacity restricts access.
  • Thresholds (Falkenmark Indicator): Annual renewable freshwater per capita:
    • Water Stress: < 1700 $m^3$
    • Water Scarcity: < 1000 $m^3$
    • Absolute Scarcity: < 500 $m^3$ Projected Global Water Stress by 2050

⭐ Over 1.7 billion people currently live in river basins where water use exceeds recharge (UN-Water).

Direct Health Effects - Parched Perils

  • Dehydration & Heat-Related Illnesses (HRI):
    • Reduced water intake → dehydration, electrolyte imbalance.
    • Exacerbated by ↑ ambient temperatures.
    • Spectrum: heat cramps, heat exhaustion, life-threatening heat stroke.
    • Vulnerable: elderly, infants, outdoor workers, individuals with chronic illness.
  • Acute Kidney Injury (AKI):
    • Severe dehydration → ↓ renal perfusion → prerenal AKI.
    • Chronic dehydration can contribute to chronic kidney disease (CKD).
  • Malnutrition:
    • ↓ Water availability → impacts crop yields & livestock → food insecurity.
    • Contributes to undernutrition, stunting, wasting, micronutrient deficiencies.
  • Compromised Personal Hygiene:
    • Insufficient water for handwashing, bathing.
    • ↑ Transmission of fecal-oral pathogens (e.g., diarrhea, dysentery).
    • ↑ Skin & eye infections (e.g., trachoma, scabies).

⭐ Heat stroke is a medical emergency characterized by core body temperature >40°C ($>104°F$) and Central Nervous System (CNS) dysfunction.

Indirect Health Effects - Ripple Ills

Water scarcity creates far-reaching "ripple" health problems:

  • Malnutrition & Food Insecurity:
    • ↓ Crop yields & livestock productivity → undernutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, especially in vulnerable groups.
  • Vector-Borne Diseases (VBDs):
    • Altered water body distribution → changes vector breeding sites (mosquitoes, snails).
    • ↑ Risk: Malaria, Dengue, Schistosomiasis.
  • Mental Health Impacts:
    • Eco-anxiety, stress, depression from livelihood loss & displacement.
  • Conflict & Displacement:
    • Competition for scarce water → social tensions, conflicts.
    • Forced migration → overcrowded settlements, ↑ disease risk.
  • Reduced Hygiene & Sanitation:
    • Insufficient water for handwashing/cleaning → ↑ diarrheal diseases (cholera), skin/eye infections (scabies, trachoma).

⭐ Water scarcity is projected to displace between 24 million and 700 million people by 2030.

Interventions & India - Adaptive Actions

  • Key Interventions:
    • Water conservation: Rainwater harvesting, watershed management, wastewater reuse.
    • Efficient usage: Drip/sprinkler irrigation, reduced agricultural water footprint.
    • Policy: Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM), community participation, robust governance.
    • Public Health: Enhanced surveillance for water-borne diseases, POU water treatment, hygiene promotion.
  • India's Adaptive Strategies:
    • National Water Mission (NWM): Goals: conservation, minimize waste, equitable distribution.
    • Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM): Targets Functional Household Tap Connection (FHTC) to all rural households by 2024.
    • Atal Bhujal Yojana (ABHY): Participatory groundwater management.
    • PMKSY (Per Drop More Crop): Micro-irrigation.

⭐ Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) supplies 55 lpcd quality water via FHTCs.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Climate change worsens water scarcity, ↑ risk of water-borne diseases (cholera, typhoid, dysentery).
  • Limited water access impairs hygiene practices, promoting feco-oral disease transmission.
  • Droughts contribute to food insecurity and malnutrition, weakening community resilience.
  • Contamination of scarce water (pathogens, chemicals) poses severe acute and chronic health risks.
  • Altered water availability impacts vector ecology, changing dengue and malaria patterns.
  • Water scarcity fuels mental health issues, social conflicts, and climate-induced migration.

Practice Questions: Water Scarcity and Health

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which of the following is a common cause of rural waterborne diseases in India?

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Flashcards: Water Scarcity and Health

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_____ of water is the difference between the amount of chlorine added to the water and the amount of residual chlorine remaining at the end of a specific period of contact at a given temperature and pH

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ of water is the difference between the amount of chlorine added to the water and the amount of residual chlorine remaining at the end of a specific period of contact at a given temperature and pH

Chlorine demand

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