Healthy Living Practices
http://www.healthabitat.com/housing-for-health/the-healthy-living-practices
Safety
When designing, upgrading or maintaining a house, immediate, life-threatening dangers are given the highest priority. We consider the following safety issues:
Electrocution
Gas explosion and asphyxiation
Injury from fire
Structural Collapse
Washing People
Being able to use functioning washing facilities reduces the spread of diseases, including diarrhoeal disease, respiratory disease, hepatitis and infections. The rates of these diseases in some Australian Indigenous communities are as high as in many developing countries and are many times higher than for non-Indigenous children. Diarrhoeal and respiratory diseases, in particular, are the major causes of illness amongst Indigenous children and also play a major role in the malnutrition experienced in the first three years of life.
Washing Clothes and Bedding
Being able to regularly wash clothes and bedding can help reduce the incidence of infectious diseases, such as diarrhoeal disease, respiratory infections, scabies and other skin infections.
Removing waste water safely
Waste water leaks and overflows around the living environment can make people sick. Disease-causing bacteria can be transmitted if people or animals come into direct contact with waste water or if the drinking water supply is contaminated with waste water. So removing waste water safely from living areas, and managing it safely around the community, is critical to keeping people healthy.
Improving nutrition, the ability to store prepare and cook food
Poor nutrition is one factor contributing to Indigenous people having high rates of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and renal disease. Poor nutrition is also a major cause of infectious diseases in children. In remote communities, choosing a healthy diet is complicated by factors such as low incomes, the cost of food, local store management practices and the ability to store, prepare and cook food at home.
Reducing the negative impacts of over-crowding
Crowded living conditions increase the risk of the spread of infectious diseases, such as meningococcal disease, rheumatic fever, tuberculosis and respiratory infections. In a crowded house it can also be more difficult to access health hardware, such as a working shower, toilet, hot water and washing machines. Increasing house size does not guarantee reduced crowding. Increasing house function does.
Reducing the negative effects of animals, insects and vermin
People’s health is badly affected by contact with animals, vermin and insects in the living environment.
Examples Include:
Mosquito borne illnesses
Chronic gut parasite carried by dogs
Dustmites causing increased levels of asthma
Flies carrying trachoma bacteria that impacts on eye health
Mice and rats attacking electrical cables and water pipes
Reducing the health impacts of dust
Many small communities, particularly in rural and remote areas, experience problems with dust, caused by either unsealed roads or vacant land in the community or from dust that is blown into the community from surrounding arid, rural or drought affected lands.
Dust causes direct health problems through the irritation of mucosal surfaces and the skin, which contributes to eye diseases, such as trachoma, respiratory disease and skin infections.
Controlling the temperature of the living environment
Living in houses that are too cold or too hot can contribute to a range of physical illnesses, as well as emotional distress. The young and elderly are most at risk from temperature extremes. Dehydration is a major risk factor for young children.
Reducing hazards that cause trauma
If houses are poorly designed and constructed, or not well maintained, there is an increased risk that residents may be injured. Elderly people, people with disabilities and young children are particularly at risk. Injuries may require medical treatment or hospitalisation and could result in infections or even disability.