Open defecation Eliminating open defecation, a practice strongly associated with poverty and exclusion, is critical to accelerating progress towards the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) sanitation target. Open defecation perpetuates the vicious cycle of disease and poverty and is an affront to personal dignity.
Those countries where open defecation is most widely practised have the highest numbers of deaths of children under the age of five, as well as high levels of undernutrition, high levels of poverty and large disparities between the rich and poor. There are also strong gender impacts: lack of safe, private toilets makes women and girls vulnerable to violence and is an impediment to girls’ education.
In March 2013, the Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations issued a call to action on sanitation that included the elimination of the practice of open defecation by 2025.
>> Access to a selection of UN publications on open defecation
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