45
The picture of access to improved non-shared toilet facilities is also quite mixed. In some countries,
both the poorest and richest have high levels of safe sanitation facilities, e.g. in Jordan, Kyrgyz Republic,
the Maldives, Tajikistan and Albania. In other countries, access to safe sanitation for the poorest is
almost nil (Mauritania, Niger, Chad and Benin), and as low as 1.4 in Cote D’Ivoire or 1.5 in Sierra Leone.
In some countries with very low level of safe sanitation for the poorest, the level for the richest
populations is also relatively low, but others, e.g. Indonesia, Mozambique, Senegal, Pakistan and
Yemen, the differences between rich and poor are very large.
Figure 26: Share of women without health insurance, by wealth quintile since 2010