Ameliorating poverty-related communication and swallowing disabilities: Sustainable Development Goal 1

Int J Speech Lang Pathol. 2023 Feb;25(1):32-36. doi: 10.1080/17549507.2022.2134458. Epub 2023 Feb 6.

Abstract

Purpose: More than 700 million people globally are still living in extreme poverty. No poverty (Sustainable Development Goal 1, SDG 1), is considered to be the greatest global challenge. This paper aims to outline the effects of poverty on communication and swallowing disabilities across the lifespan and steps to take for its amelioration.

Result: Poverty and disability are in a vicious cycle with each being a cause for and a consequence of the other. Poverty has incontrovertible and significant ramifications for communication and swallowing disabilities across the lifetime from pregnancy to old age. The individual, family and social burden and costs of these disabilities have lifelong economic and social consequences.

Conclusion: Considering poverty is a known and important determinant of communication and swallowing disabilities, the most potent weapon is to focus on preventing and ameliorating poverty-related communication and swallowing disabilities in children. A call to action is issued to speech-language pathologists to take steps towards this goal. This commentary paper focusses on Sustainable Development Goal of no poverty (SDG 1) and also addresses zero hunger (SDG 2), reduced inequalities (SDG 10), and climate action (SDG 13).

Keywords: Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs); climate action (SDG 13); communication disability; no poverty (SDG 1); reduced inequalities (SDG 10); swallowing disability; zero hunger (SDG 2).

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Deglutition*
  • Humans
  • Poverty
  • Sustainable Development*