The basic child-health problems in the shanty towns of Lima are protein-calorie malnutrition and infectious disease. The background of social, economic and cultural conditionsa are related to these main health problems. The basic problems are poverty, lack of sewage disposal and running water, and the maldistribution of public expenditure between city and countryside on one hand and curative and preventive medicine on the other. Despite official statistics, which show a steadily decreasing Infant Mortality Rate in Peru, and all other Latin American countries, it seems that the Infant Mortality Rate is almost twice the official states rate. Health education, particularly in nutritional matters, is not adapted to indigenous foods and customs, but attempts to promote westernized conceptrs. Medical care in Peru is by large directed to the needs of the middle class, and the middle class by and large dictates the type of medical care available
In shanty towns, common diseases include respiratory infections due to poor ventilation and sanitation, diarrheal diseases from contaminated water sources, and vector-borne diseases like malaria and dengue fever due to inadequate waste management. Other health issues may arise from overcrowding, malnutrition, and limited access to healthcare services.
There is no Plumbing or electric. The houses there are built with cheap, recycled bad quality materials. There is no clean water there so they would have to go to a nearby stream or tap but sometimes there is no water there either. People are so poor that they start drug dealing and stealing things from other people. Most people who live there are jobless but without a job, they would easily be dead. Also, there is no sewerage system, children often play around sewage and would easily become sick. Diseases spread extremely quickly.
Usually because there is little or no sanitation. Open sewers are common, and hospitals are nonexistent
cholera and dysentery
Living conditions in shanty towns are often poor due to a lack of adequate infrastructure such as clean water, sanitation facilities, and solid housing structures. Additionally, these areas are often overcrowded, leading to issues with sanitation, hygiene, and the spread of diseases. Poverty, limited access to education and job opportunities, and government neglect can also contribute to the poor living conditions in shanty towns.
People may be attracted to shanty towns due to low rent costs, proximity to job opportunities, or a sense of community among residents. However, living conditions in shanty towns are often substandard with inadequate infrastructure and access to basic services.
Some well-known shanty towns in Sao Paulo include Paraisopolis, Heliopolis, and Cidade Tiradentes. These communities often face challenges related to poverty, crime, and lack of access to basic services. efforts have been made to improve infrastructure and living conditions in these areas.
Hoovervilles were the put-down nickname for shanty-towns during the Great Depression, named after President Herbert Hoover. They were makeshift settlements where people who had lost their homes or jobs lived in poverty.
Slums refer to densely populated urban areas with poor housing and living conditions, often lacking basic amenities. Shanty towns, on the other hand, are makeshift settlements constructed from materials like corrugated metal, cardboard, and wood. While both are forms of informal housing, shanty towns are typically more temporary and precarious in nature.
A group of shanty towns rife with 3 or more diseases
there are over a thousand shanty towns in the world.
Peaple move to shanty towns because it's the only place they can go, as people move in the shanty towns will expand.
shanty town
Shanty towns they are places which are poor.. for example India , Africa , China
there are no piped water so people drink the contaminated water and by that they get diseases such as a typhoid
Shanty Towns
farming
rape
Mumbia's shanty towns are horrible and that about 40% of people live in them. They have no electricity no running water and no toilets.
Millions of people live in shanty towns with no water and the most little electricity.
Living conditions in shanty towns are often poor due to a lack of adequate infrastructure such as clean water, sanitation facilities, and solid housing structures. Additionally, these areas are often overcrowded, leading to issues with sanitation, hygiene, and the spread of diseases. Poverty, limited access to education and job opportunities, and government neglect can also contribute to the poor living conditions in shanty towns.