Access to improved water and sanitation continues to be a challenge with 26 percent of the world’s population (2 billion) not having access to safe drinking water services, and an estimated 46 percent (3.6 billion) lacking access to safely managed sanitation (UN-Water, 2023). Poor water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) practices can increase the susceptibility of populations to deadly diseases and deaths and cause major economic losses.
In 2015, India included 90 percent of the South Asian and 50 percent of the global population who defecated out in the open. The Government of India launched the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM), and WASH in schools in response to the situation.
The SBM, and particularly sub-mission SBM (Grammen) has helped 100 million rural households and 500 million residents in gaining access to toilets across 630,000 villages and reports indicate that 95 percent households have access to toilet and use them. Phase-II of the SBM focuses on sustaining the gains made by providing access to toilet facilities to the newly emerging eligible rural households and solid and liquid waste management in the villages of the country in forthcoming years (2020–2025).
The other initiative JJM, which subsumed the National Rural Drinking Water Program by its launch in 2019, is ensuring potable water in adequate quantity, of prescribed quality, with adequate pressure, on a regular and long-term basis to all rural households and public institutions. Under this mission, till March 2022, 102.3 million rural households (54%) have received the benefit of having tap water connections.
However, is this access even among all populations? What is the state of tribal populations in the context of WASH indicators and access to WASH facilities? A recent study published in the Journal of Water, sanitation & Hygiene for Development explores the spatial heterogeneity in the access of tribal populations to improved water and sanitation facilities and its correlates at the district level in India. The study uses data from the fifth round of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5), 2019–21.
Around 90 percent of the tribal population in India lives in rural areas, and a large proportion of Scheduled Tribes (STs) live in forests and depend on forest produce, are hunter–gatherers, shifting cultivators, pastoralists, nomadic herders, and artisans. They are the most vulnerable due to geographical isolation and a number of sociocultural and political factors that makes them lag behind in terms of socioeconomic status, limits their access to resources and benefits derived from developmental programmes.
The study finds that:
The findings underscore the urgent need for targeted interventions, infrastructure development, and policy interventions to enhance access to improved water and sanitation among tribal households in India.