The bathrooms look bigger now and the sinks are more accessible for children. With over 880 pupils, the kindergarten’s bathroom facilities were in desperate need of renovations.
(...) The hygiene is better and the bathrooms are more comfortable to use,”
Ms. Odgerel Surenjav, doctor of the kindergarten
UNICEFMongolia/2018/Sabina Netrvalova
The old bathrooms were size inappropriate and unsanitary.
Language:English
Score: 1388983.9
-
https://www.unicef.org/mongoli...bathrooms-kindergartens-no-122
Data Source: un
UNICEF Belize
UNICEF
16 September 2019
“The bathroom was ugly, not healthy. I don’t use the bathroom at school. (...) “The bathrooms had pee on the floor, stool in the toilets and were very smelly. (...) “Children deserve clean bathrooms and handwashing facilities that work and are accessible.
Language:English
Score: 1375044.9
-
https://www.unicef.org/belize/...tion-and-basic-handwashing-all
Data Source: un
Also, you should use a separate bathroom, if available. If you need to be around other people or animals in or outside of the home, wear a surgical mask.
(...) Clean all “high-touch” surfaces everyday. • Clean and disinfect high-touch surfaces
in your “sick room” and bathroom. Let someone else clean and disinfect surfaces in common areas, but not your bedroom and bathroom.
• If a caregiver or other person needs to clean and disinfect a sick person’s bedroom or bathroom, they should do so on an as-needed basis. The caregiver/other person should wear a mask and wait as long as possible after the sick person has used the bathroom.
High-touch surfaces include phones, remote controls, counters, tabletops, doorknobs, bathroom fixtures, toilets, keyboards, tablets, and bedside tables.
• Clean and disinfect areas that may have blood, stool, or body fluids on them.
• Use household cleaners and disinfectants.
Language:English
Score: 1355855.1
-
https://www.un.org/sites/un2.u...avirus_comms_preventifsick.pdf
Data Source: un
Search Close
Search UNICEF
Fulltext search
Max
Article
Bathrooms Back to Service
Bathrooms in Primary Healthcare Units in Minya are entirely refurbished with UNICEF’ support
Dalia Younis
UNICEF/Egypt 2021/Ahmed Mostafa
Available in:
English
العربية
29 September 2021
Long hours of a night shift or waiting to get healthcare services at a Primary Healthcare Unit (PHU) with a broken bathroom that can hardly be used. (...) In Minya, many PHUs have damaged, leaking bathrooms, rusty water pipes and an overall damaged water distribution infrastructure. (...) UNICEF/Egypt 2021/Ahmed Mostafa
In one month, bathrooms and pipe systems in three out of 15 targeted PHUs in Minya were completely refurbished.
Language:English
Score: 1353787.8
-
https://www.unicef.org/egypt/stories/bathrooms-back-service
Data Source: un
Search Close
Search UNICEF
Fulltext search
Max
Article
Bathrooms Back to Service
Bathrooms in Primary Healthcare Units in Minya are entirely refurbished with UNICEF’ support
Dalia Younis
UNICEF/Egypt 2021/Ahmed Mostafa
Available in:
English
العربية
19 May 2022
Long hours of a night shift or waiting to get healthcare services at a Primary Healthcare Unit (PHU) with a broken bathroom that can hardly be used. (...) In Minya, many PHUs have damaged, leaking bathrooms, rusty water pipes and an overall damaged water distribution infrastructure. (...) UNICEF/Egypt 2021/Ahmed Mostafa
In one month, bathrooms and pipe systems in three out of 15 targeted PHUs in Minya were completely refurbished.
Language:English
Score: 1349804.4
-
https://www.unicef.org/mena/stories/bathrooms-back-service
Data Source: un
Moreover, the two organizations helped constructing a 60 square meter school extension consisting of seven rooms, including four shower rooms, two dressing rooms, a men's bathroom, and a women's bathrooms with two toilets and two sinks in each bathroom. (...) UNICEF
Ankhiluun, and Demberelnyam
“I am so grateful to finally have a convenient indoor bathroom and a nice new building with changing rooms and hot showers. (...) Whereas the indoor toilets are reserved for the pupils and school staff, the newly built WASH facility has a separate door to the public shower and bathroom, making it accessible to all community members.
Language:English
Score: 1318761.3
-
https://www.unicef.org/mongoli...ove-everything-about-my-school
Data Source: un
Also, you should use a separate bathroom, if available. If you need to be around other people or animals in or outside of the home, wear a surgical mask.
(...) Clean all “high-touch” surfaces everyday. • Clean and disinfect high-touch surfaces
in your “sick room” and bathroom. Let someone else clean and disinfect surfaces in common areas, but not your bedroom and bathroom.
• If a caregiver or other person needs to clean and disinfect a sick person’s bedroom or bathroom, they should do so on an as-needed basis. The caregiver/other person should wear a mask and wait as long as possible after the sick person has used the bathroom.
High-touch surfaces include phones, remote controls, counters, tabletops, doorknobs, bathroom fixtures, toilets, keyboards, tablets, and bedside tables.
• Clean and disinfect areas that may have blood, stool, or body fluids on them.
• Use household cleaners and disinfectants.
Language:English
Score: 1291008.1
-
https://www.un.org/sites/un2.u...avirus_comms_preventifsick.pdf
Data Source: un
Clean all “high-touch” surfaces everyday Clean high-touch surfaces in your isolation area (“sick room” and bathroom) every day; let a caregiver clean and disinfect high-touch surfaces in other areas of the home.
• Clean and disinfect: Routinely clean high-touch surfaces in your “sick room” and bathroom. Let someone else clean and disinfect surfaces in common areas, but not your bedroom and bathroom.
ɞ If a caregiver or other person needs to clean and disinfect a sick person’s bedroom or bathroom, they should do so on an as-needed basis. The caregiver/other person should wear a mask and wait as long as possible after the sick person has used the bathroom.
• High-touch surfaces include phones, remote controls, counters, tabletops, doorknobs, bathroom fixtures, toilets, keyboards, tablets, and bedside tables.
• Clean and disinfect areas that may have blood, stool, or body fluids on them.
• Household cleaners and disinfectants: Clean the area or item with soap and water or another detergent if it is dirty.
Language:English
Score: 1277815.1
-
https://www.un.org/other/afics...h-2019-ncov-fact-sheet-cdc.pdf
Data Source: un
Rooms & Rates: Shared room (3-4 pers.) – $65.00 per night per person, with bathroom;
shared room (2 pers.) $60.00 per night per person with shared bathroom down the hall;
private single room $85.00 per night with bathroom, $75.00 per night with shared
bathroom down the hall; private double room $165.00 per person per night with
bathroom, $145.00 per person per night with shared bathroom down the hall. (...) Room with one double bed or two single beds + private bathroom $139.00-
319.00 per night per room. Room with two double beds and private bathroom $279.00
per room per night, room with double bed and two twin beds and private bathroom
$329.00. (...) All
Standard Cabins share the communal bathrooms located at the end of the hall on each
floor.
Language:English
Score: 1265276.4
-
https://www.un.org/esa/socdev/...i/documents/2015/logistics.pdf
Data Source: un
We were sexually and racially harassed on a daily basis.
We were denied bathroom privileges. Even when we were allowed to go the
bathroom, we were forced to wait long periods of time and as a result many of the elderly workers wore pampers (disposable baby diapers) to keep from soiling their clothes. Many times, white male supervisors would come into the women’s bathrooms which had no doors on the stalls. They would stand over us and look at us while we actually sat on the toilet. (...) At that time, workers at Delta Pride were given six (6) bathrooms breaks a week. Now, in 2009, workers in catfish and poultry plants in the Delta, are forced to clock out and go to the bathroom.
Language:English
Score: 1263575.8
-
https://www.un.org/en/durbanreview2009/pdf/Sarah%20White.pdf
Data Source: un