Hutton Guy, Haller Laurence, Bartram Jamie
Swiss Tropical Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
J Water Health. 2007 Dec;5(4):481-502. doi: 10.2166/wh.2007.009.
The aim of this study was to estimate the economic benefits and costs of a range of interventions to improve access to water supply and sanitation facilities in the developing world. Results are presented for eleven developing country WHO sub-regions as well as at the global level, in United States Dollars (US$) for the year 2000. Five different types of water supply and sanitation improvement were modelled: achieving the water millennium development goal of reducing by half in 2015 those without improved water supply in the year 1990; achieving the combined water supply and sanitation MDG; universal basic access to water supply and sanitation; universal basic access plus water purification at the point-of-use; and regulated piped water supply and sewer connection. Predicted reductions in the incidence of diarrhoeal disease were calculated based on the expected population receiving these interventions. The costs of the interventions included estimations of the full investment and annual running costs. The benefits of the interventions included time savings due to easier access, gain in productive time and reduced health care costs saved due to less illness, and prevented deaths. The results show that all water and sanitation improvements are cost-beneficial in all developing world sub-regions. In developing regions, the return on a US$1 investment was in the range US$5 to US$46, depending on the intervention. For the least developed regions, investing every US$1 to meet the combined water supply and sanitation MDG lead to a return of at least US$5 (AFR-D, AFR-E, SEAR-D) or US$12 (AMR-B; EMR-B; WPR-B). The main contributor to economic benefits was time savings associated with better access to water and sanitation services, contributing at least 80% to overall economic benefits. One-way sensitivity analysis showed that even under pessimistic data assumptions the potential economic benefits outweighed the costs in all developing world regions. Further country case-studies are recommended as a follow up to this global analysis.
本研究的目的是评估一系列旨在改善发展中国家供水和卫生设施可达性的干预措施的经济效益和成本。报告了2000年以美元计算的世卫组织11个发展中国家次区域以及全球层面的结果。对五种不同类型的供水和卫生改善措施进行了建模:实现到2015年将1990年无改善供水人口减半的千年发展目标;实现供水和卫生的综合千年发展目标;普及基本的供水和卫生服务;普及基本服务并在使用点进行水净化;以及提供规范的管道供水和下水道连接。根据预期接受这些干预措施的人口计算腹泻疾病发病率的预计降低情况。干预措施的成本包括全部投资和年度运营成本的估算。干预措施的效益包括因取水更便捷而节省的时间、生产时间的增加以及因疾病减少而节省的医疗保健成本和预防的死亡。结果表明,所有供水和卫生改善措施在所有发展中世界次区域都具有成本效益。在发展中区域,1美元投资的回报率在5美元至46美元之间,具体取决于干预措施。对于最不发达区域,每投资1美元以实现供水和卫生综合千年发展目标可带来至少5美元(非洲区域D、非洲区域E、东南亚区域D)或12美元(美洲区域B;东地中海区域B;西太平洋区域B)的回报。经济效益的主要贡献因素是因更好地获得供水和卫生服务而节省的时间,其对总体经济效益的贡献至少为80%。单向敏感性分析表明,即使在悲观的数据假设下,所有发展中世界区域的潜在经济效益也超过成本。建议开展进一步的国家案例研究作为此次全球分析的后续行动。