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March-April 2003
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The SARS virus is big news. Understandably. It is a virus, mutant and
mysterious, which in this extremely small and well-connected world is capable of being transported within days across the globe. Globalisation means that it can move from the remotest and poorest of villages to the homes of the richest. It is of no small credit and achievement that the world science and administrative authorities are working overtime to diagnose, investigate and take precautions to keep the disease from spreading. Creditable. Impressive.

But put another way, it is also shameful. Where is the same global leadership and determination when it comes to countless diseases that threaten the poor? From the acute lower respiratory infection, which according to academic and lifelong campaigner Kirk Smith kills 8200 people each day, to malaria, tuberculosis and the AIDS pandemic, global commitment to eradicating diseases has never been more wanting or pathetic.

This is also true of the growing problems of arsenicosis and fluorosis. The extent of the problem and enormity of the tragedy caused by these diseases in the subcontinent is indeed shocking and frightening. We are literally talking about the crippling of these countries. Perhaps deliberately.

Because what is rarely understood is that these diseases are related to the state of groundwater. Studies done in the arsenic-affected belt show that concentration increases with depth in the aquifer peaks around 100-125 feet down — and gets reduced as it reaches 400 feet down. The fluoride-groundwater link is clear but its geographical extent is not known. No one region can be identified as chronically or endemically fluoride-prone.

It is also ironical, that in some ways, both arsenicosis and fluorosis, are the result of efforts to eradicate other equally killing diseases — caused by dirty drinking water. In the 1960s and 1970s, national governments and international agencies drew up detailed plans to provide safe water to all. They understood, rightly, that bacteria in water kills more babies than any other substance. They believed the water on the surface — in millions of ponds and tanks and other water harvesting structures — was contaminated and so invested quickly in new technologies to dig deeper and deeper into the ground. Drills, borepipes, tubewells and handpumps quickly became the triumphalistic instruments of public health missions.

Then the water table started to fall. Investment were made to dig deeper. And here is where the story turns. While government was well-intentioned in its quest for clean water, it was equally callous, indeed criminal, when it came to responding to the news that was filtering in that maybe, just maybe, these ‘strange’ diseases are linked to drinking water. It responded with denial and caused confusion by misinformation. Science and its uncertainty became the servile tool for inaction.

The answer to the problem, therefore, is not the management of the disease. The answer is in the management of water. We are threateningly dependent on underground aquifers for our drinking needs. At the same time, technological advancement is helping us reach lower and lower into the earth to search for water. What we desperately need is strategies to ensure that the abstraction of water does not exceed the recharge of the groundwater aquifers.

Most of the victims — the patients remain unknown. They only know that they are ill. Very ill. Sometimes doctors diagnose their ailment. Sometimes not. But they still have no option but to drink the water that is poison.

This SARS we are dealing with has no cure. Only prevention will work.

Sunita Narain
Director



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JAN-FEB 2003|NOV-DEC 2002|SEPT-OCT 2002|MAY-JUNE 2002|MARCH 2002

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