Priorities

Slum Health Is Not Urban Health: Why We Must Distinguish Between The Two

Slum Health Is Not Urban Health: Why We Must Distinguish Between The Two

by The Daily Eye Team January 25 2017, 1:44 pm Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 37 secs

We live in an urban century. Already more than 50% of the global population lives in urban areas. The United Nations estimates that by 2030 five billion of the world’s population of eight billion will be urban. Most of the growth in urban areas is expected to occur in the developing countries of Africa and Asia, continuing a trend seen in the past decade. Rapid urbanisation in developing countries has been characterised by an accompanying proliferation of slum areas. Cities such as Nairobi, Kenya; Mumbai, India and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil are home to some of the world’s largest slum areas. Sub-Saharan Africa has an especially high number of slum inhabitants: 62% of its urban population lives in slums.

 

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