TY - JOUR KW - Anthropology, Cultural KW - Bangladesh KW - Developing countries KW - Health Policy KW - Health Promotion KW - Healthcare Disparities KW - Housing KW - Humans KW - Organizational Case Studies KW - Poverty Areas KW - Prejudice KW - Private Sector KW - Sanitation KW - Urban Health KW - Urban Population KW - Urban Renewal AU - Rashid SF AB -

The health and rights of populations living in informal or slum settlements are key development issues of the twenty-first century. As of 2007, the majority of the world's population lives in urban areas. More than one billion of these people, or one in three city-dwellers, live in inadequate housing with no or a few basic resources. In Bangladesh, urban slum settlements tend to be located in low-lying, flood-prone, poorly-drained areas, having limited formal garbage disposal and minimal access to safe water and sanitation. These areas are severely crowded, with 4-5 people living in houses of just over 100 sq feet. These conditions of high density of population and poor sanitation exacerbate the spread of diseases. People living in these areas experience social, economic and political exclusion, which bars them from society's basic resources. This paper overviews policies and actions that impact the level of exclusion of people living in urban slum settlements in Bangladesh, with a focus on improving the health and rights of the urban poor. Despite some strategies adopted to ensure better access to water and health, overall, the country does not have a comprehensive policy for urban slum residents, and the situation remains bleak.

BT - Journal of health, population, and nutrition C1 -

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19761090?dopt=Abstract

IS - 4 J2 - J Health Popul Nutr LA - eng N2 -

The health and rights of populations living in informal or slum settlements are key development issues of the twenty-first century. As of 2007, the majority of the world's population lives in urban areas. More than one billion of these people, or one in three city-dwellers, live in inadequate housing with no or a few basic resources. In Bangladesh, urban slum settlements tend to be located in low-lying, flood-prone, poorly-drained areas, having limited formal garbage disposal and minimal access to safe water and sanitation. These areas are severely crowded, with 4-5 people living in houses of just over 100 sq feet. These conditions of high density of population and poor sanitation exacerbate the spread of diseases. People living in these areas experience social, economic and political exclusion, which bars them from society's basic resources. This paper overviews policies and actions that impact the level of exclusion of people living in urban slum settlements in Bangladesh, with a focus on improving the health and rights of the urban poor. Despite some strategies adopted to ensure better access to water and health, overall, the country does not have a comprehensive policy for urban slum residents, and the situation remains bleak.

PY - 2009 SP - 574 EP - 86 T2 - Journal of health, population, and nutrition TI - Strategies to reduce exclusion among populations living in urban slum settlements in Bangladesh. UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2928105/pdf/jhpn0027-0574.pdf VL - 27 SN - 1606-0997 ER -