4.1 Article

Five enablers to deliver safe water and effective sewage treatment to remote Indigenous communities in Australia

Journal

RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

COLL MEDICINE & DENTISTRY, JAMES COOK UNIV TOWNSVILLE
DOI: 10.22605/RRH6565

Keywords

Australia; drinking water; Indigenous Australians; sanitation; sewage management

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Providing safe drinking water and effective sanitation in remote Indigenous communities is challenging due to biological and chemical contamination in water sources. Monitoring and maintenance can be difficult in remote areas, leading to potential health risks from unpalatable water consumption. Effective programs in New South Wales and Queensland have identified enablers such as support, collaboration, suitable technology, sustainable funding, and a holistic view of water and sanitation systems.
Context: Safe drinking water and effective sanitation in remotely located Indigenous communities are essential services and their provision is a human right. Yet sustainable provision of these services can be challenging. Risks to human health from inadequate provision include transmission of hygiene-related infections from microbial contamination, and toxic chemicals that may cause kidney damage or dysfunction. This narrative review is conducted in the current context of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 6, the 'refresh' of the National Agreement on Closing the Gap in Indigenous inequity, and the 2020 Inquiry of the Australian Productivity Commission into the National Water Reform. Issues: Challenges to providing drinking water supplies in remote communities include biological contamination and chemical contamination from naturally occurring elements in groundwater. Monitoring regimes can be challenged by remote location, minimal and/or high turnover of staff and a lack of ongoing maintenance. Unpalatable water can shift consumption to purchased drinks such as sugar-sweetened beverages, with flow on health impacts of diet-related chronic conditions such as overweight and obesity, and type 2 diabetes. Lessons learned: By analysing two effective programs from remote areas of New South Wales and the Torres Strait Islands in Queensland, Australia, five enablers were identified: people factors (support, training, cultural competence); cross-agency collaboration (regulators, funders, state and local government); technology that is fit for place, purpose and local people; funding that is sufficient and sustainable; and taking a systems view of water and sanitation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.1
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available