WATER OF LIFE GUATEMALA

Similar documents
Sawyer PointONE Filter

P r e s e n t a t i o n. Water Systems. Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia

CLEAN WATER THE FASTEST EASIEST AND MOST COST EFFICIENT WAY

Sawyer Water filters. Clean Water for Life. India and Kenya. Project Overview

INTRODUCTION IMPROVING SANITATION AND WATER QUALITY IN LOKO TOWN

BridgIT Water Foundation. Suitable, Accessible, Sustainable Water to the People

Access to water supply and sanitation is a fundamental need and a

filterpure mission statement

KNOWLEDGE EXPANDER WATER Shell Global Solutions International B.V.

Benefits and Costs of the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Targets for the Post-2015 Development Agenda

LifeStraw s Follow the Liters Campaign. Empowering today s youth to become tomorrow s leaders

SAFE WATER A MESSAGE OF HOPE, HEALTH AND HUMANITY A KEY TO WIDESPREAD HEALTH

Strategies for the safe management of drinking-water for human consumption

WORLD ISSUES: Development in Africa ESSAY 1:

BOGOTÁ Indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities in the Chocó department promote their food security and nutrition in Colombia.

A Study on Existing Domestic Water Sanitation Practices in Adilabad District, India

SANITATION MEDIE, GHANA

Clean Water for the World &

UNICEF s Next Generation Tap Project: Providing the World s Children with Safe and Clean Water

Cyobe Community 10 Days 2014

Integrating WASH, nutrition and health programmes to tackle malnutrition in Eastern Chad

EL MOGOTE WATER PROJECT

UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR EUROPE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION REGIONAL OFFICE FOR EUROPE

Executive Summary. Thirsting for a Future: Water and children in a changing climate

THE SDS G20 INITIATIVE The Alexandria Meeting 1-2 December 2004

Defining Best and Worst- Case Bacterial Removals for a Home Water Treatment and Storage Unit

WASH 17 COUNTRIES 842 COMMUNITIES 545,360 PEOPLE 8,460 SOLUTIONS

Dr. Ligy Philip, Professor Dept. of Civil Engineering Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, INDIA

WORLD HEALTH DAY CHALLENGE 2014 SPECIAL HEALTH REPORT

Water quality and food safety

A SOURCE OF WATER, A SOURCE OF HOPE

THE SDS G20 INITIATIVE A Commitment to Provision of Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation (SDS) to all by 2025

P O LL I N G A N A LY TI C S D ATA BA N K S TR ATE G Y

PROJECT Water for the Poor. Worldwide. And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.

Waterborne Diseases. Dr Manjula Rathnabharathie

Sanitation & Hygiene: Module on Childhood Diarrhea. The global picture. Designing an intervention in rural Zimbabwe.

The Natural TM Water Purifier. Onyenma & Zeyu

A T E A C H E R ' S G U I D E T O

LA MANZANA WATER PROJECT PHASE II

ZAMBIA THE DATA THE PROJECT THE COUNTRY OUR WORK IN ZAMBIA

Improving Health in Africa

Policies and Approaches to Protect Water Quality and Resources in Developing Countries

Wash Booklet for seniors

WATER SANITATION, HEALTH AND HYGIENE PROGRAM LOCATION: IBADAN, S.W NIGERIA

The Water Crisis: Affecting Women s Opportunity and Health. Mintamir is an eighteen-year-old woman from Amhara, Ethiopia. Every morning since

SAFE DRINKING WATER PROJECT PROPOSAL OVERVIEW

Water Quality Testing II:

LIBERIA THE DATA THE PROJECT THE COUNTRY OUR WORK IN LIBERIA

WATER AND SANITATION. Background Information

SSEWA-Pak\LSRDA Nadi Filter A Self Help Biological Sand Filter

Water quality or quantity?

PROJECT REPORT STRENGTHENING WATER AND SANITATION SITUATION. Initiated by MEDICARE HEALTH SERVICES SOCIETY

78% 94% Improved water 75% 4 hrs average water 49% Water, sanitation & hygiene (WASH) fact sheet. Punjab. province. WASH access 1. Punjab.

Water and Sanitation for All: Securing our Future, Preserving our Planet

WASH THANKYOU WATER AND PERSONAL CARE HELP GET WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE PROGRAMS TO VULNERABLE COMMUNITIES. ETHIOPIA KENYA BURUNDI ZIMBABWE

Convergence in access to safe water and adequate sanitation: International Journal of Water, 1 (2), 2001, pp

Socio economic aspects of decentralised water projects in Africa

PreventionPracticesfromwaterBorneDiseasesWithinHouseholdsintheBamendankweMunicipalityNorthWestCameroon

ANNUAL REPORT OF THE RESIDENT/HUMANITARIAN COORDINATOR ON THE USE OF CERF GRANTS

Hand pumps for irrigation Often pumped for > 20 hours /day Enough food to last for 4 lean months but also saw how dirty water can kill even when

LA MANZANA WATER PROJECT PHASE I

UNICEF Lao PDR TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR SERVICES CONTRACT

Sharanya Kaniambady*, Dinesh Peraje Vasu, Sandhya G, Annarao Gunderao Kulkarni

A WORLD FREE FROM HUNGER. Action Against Hunger ACF International. ACF-Liberia, V. Burger

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Volume 6, No 1, Copyright by the authors - Licensee IPA- Under Creative Commons license 3.

COMMUNITY PERCEPTION ON QUANTITY, QUALITY AND REASONS FOR TREATING DRINKING WATER IN SATELLITE TOWNS OF MWANZA CITY

LifeStraw Community. Safe water for schools, health facilities, community settings and for emergency response

WASH in Wetlands Where do we stand?

Water, sanitation, waste a necessity we all depend on

Global Water and Health

DISPARITIES IN ACCESS TO IMPROVED SANITATION

Lessons learnt by Concern Worldwide over 16 years of WASH programmes in North Korea

Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage: A solution for Indonesia

2018 HONDURAS SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION WITH SCHOOL SUPPLIES

Water and sanitation status relating to the poorest in Bangladesh

Framing Climate Change Impacts on Water Resources and Health

ADRESSING SAFE DRINKING WATER THROUGH HWTS AND WSP IN KENYA

3 Health-based targets. Health-based targets

El Nino Impacts in Southern Africa: highlights from the 2015/16 Season

Job pack: Gender Advisor

Project Village Romania, 3000 inhab. Unprotected water-wells in rural areas

ZAMBIA THE DATA THE PROJECT THE COUNTRY OUR WORK IN ZAMBIA

Evaluation of the Biosand Filter for Reducing Risks of Diarrheal Illness and Improving Drinking Water Quality in Communities of The Dominican Republic

UNICEF indicator clinic Data for children in the SDGs Monitoring SDG indicators for WASH

Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Programs

AHD Nadi Filter A Self Help Biological Sand Filter

Beautiful, clean water!

Annexure II to the Board Report. Standard Chartered Securities (India) Limited (SCSI) Corporate Social Responsibility

SOLUTIONS MOST NEEDED

TERMS OF REFERENCE - LRPS

Excellencies, Ministers Distinguished Delegates and Representatives of International Organizations, Ladies and Gentlemen,

International Year of Sanitation 2008 and NAD Provincial AMPL. Banda Aceh 12 May 2008

Executive Summary. The vast majority of the children in extremely high flood occurrence zones live in Asia.

Walking For Water. Objective: Students will compare their own experiences with the availability of water to those in third world countries.

WATER WEEK 2003 Washington DC, USA, March 2003

Somalia Appealing Agency Project Title

Demand-led approaches to Sanitation

asdf g Water for Life Decade [ ] or Life Decade [ ] UN-Water

Water treatment. Why do we need to clean our water? Diseases carried by unclean water. Did you know? Did you know?

Job pack: Private Sector Development Advisor

Transcription:

WATER OF LIFE GUATEMALA

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Access to safe water is a fundamental human need. Yet, more than 780 million people worldwide have no access to an improved water source and every day over 2,200 children die of easily preventable diarrhoeal diseases i. According to the United Nations Development Programme, improvement of drinking water quality would lead to a 45 per cent reduction of diarrhoea episodes worldwide ii. Guatemala has a population of 15.47 million iii. 53 per cent of Guatemalans live in poverty and 13.5 per cent live in extreme poverty, on under $1.25 a day iv. Characteristic to the region, poverty in Guatemala is complex and multidimensional. Disparities between the urban and rural populations are great. Of the ten leading causes of death in the country, diarrhoeal illness is responsible for almost 4 per cent and causes 7 per cent of infant mortality v. Provision of drinking water services is not regulated by the central government and each municipality has its own system. Of the 331 municipalities in Guatemala, only 24 have drinking water treatment systems, and of these only 15 are in operation. Water sources are contaminated with faecal waste and chemicals, and thousands of children are dying from diarrhoea. The need is particularly acute in rural areas where only 73 per cent have access to piped water, compared to 98 per cent in urban areas vi. In a country with the fourth highest malnutrition rate of children under five in the world, parasites transferred by waterborne contamination are consuming the nutrients children need vii. Compassion's work in Guatemala began in 1976. Currently 46,337 children participate in 190 child development centres. Compassion partners with churches around the country to help them provide the children of Guatemala with the opportunity to rise above their circumstances and become all God has created them to be. Compassion Guatemala has identified several challenges that currently hinder the holistic Child Development Programme, including malnutrition, violence, child abuse, poor sanitation, lack of access to medical care, education and unemployment. This RESPOND Initiative aims to provide 650 families who have been identified as at risk from drinking unsafe water with Water of Life filters. Compassion s Water of Life units are based on technology developed for kidney dialysis. Each filter is made up of tiny micro tubes with pores hundreds of times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. These pores remove deadly bacteria and allow only safe water to pass through for drinking. After pouring dirty water into the bucket from piped sources or lakes, rivers, ponds or puddles, the water flows through the filter and comes out completely safe to drink. 2 Interim report for initiative GU-014771

ACTIVITY REPORT PROJECTS 5 Compassion child development centres across Guatemala INITIATIVE Compassion Water of Life: the distribution of safe water systems RESPOND NUMBER GU-014771 BENEFICIARIES 650 Compassion-assisted children and their families FUNDING 28,250 START DATE Autumn 2014 Compassion Guatemala staff first formed an implementation committee to oversee the initiative. Surveys on hygiene habits were then conducted at each of the beneficiary projects and a qualified instructor was hired. All of the beneficiary caregivers received hygiene and sanitation training in November 2014, covering topics such as water contamination, clean home environments and the importance of hand washing. The survey results guided the instructor as to which issues needed more attention in each community. Attendance of this training was a requirement for all beneficiaries to receive a filter. The local Water of Life distributor was responsible for training project representatives in the use and maintenance of the filters. These volunteers were then responsible to train each family, and will assist in ongoing maintenance. Once the training phase was completed, the distribution began. This was coordinated by the project director from each location and carried out by the local supplier in January and February 2015. Each family was given a Compassion Water of Life unit, including: a filter and attached bucket a second bucket to catch the now-safe water in a clean container a syringe that is used for rinsing the filter with safe water Staff at each project will be responsible for monitoring the information gathered from medical check-ups throughout the rest of 2015. Staff expect to see a significant reduction in the occurrence of gastrointestinal diseases, resulting in an improvement to general health and nutrition as access to safe water is provided. Home visits to the beneficiaries will be conducted as well, and project staff will perform surveys in order to monitor the use and effectiveness of the Water of Life filters. Challenges Guatemala s geography has been challenging, as the projects are located far away from each other. Many projects also lack specific addresses, and even with GPS coordinates it can be very difficult to get to each one. In most cases, project staff had to meet the distributor and trainer en route to lead them to the project. A major challenge is also the lack of access to water. In some communities, there are no water sources nearby. Water still needs to be collected for the filters to be useful. 3 Interim report for initiative GU-014771

Originally, this initiative was aimed at benefitting 650 families in the west part of the country. However the scope was changed to include mothers from the 10 Child Survival Programmes in the country with a greater need for access to safe water. The filters were distributed as follows: Project Project name - location Number of filters GU-897 Cree Student Centre 85 GU-917 La Semilla Student Centre 85 GU-459 El Buen Samaritano Student Centre 120 GU-CS1 Canaan Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS2 Lluvias de Gracia Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS3 La Semilla Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS4 Niños del Carpintero Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS5 La Familia Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS6 Rayos de Esperanza Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS7 IDEC Jesús es el Rey Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS8 Guatemala Child Survival Programme 36 GU-CS9 Bezaleel-Col. Trinidad Chipati Child Survival Programme 36 GU-C10 Sendaro de La Verdad Child Survival Programme 36 LONG-TERM IMPACT The life-long effectiveness of Compassion Water of Life means that the units have huge health, educational and economic benefits for the Compassion-assisted children and their families. When children are healthy they can go to school and receive the skills required to secure stable employment. By giving children sustained protection from diarrhoea, they will be less at risk from malnutrition and stunting. Safe water will mean that a family needs fewer resources to treat illness; over a lifetime this financial saving could be significant. WHY COMPASSION WATER OF LIFE? The unit provides safe water for life. With occasional rinsing, Compassion Water of Life lasts a lifetime - each filter is capable of filtering 1 million gallons of water and a child is expected to only need 14,600 gallons in their lifetime. The filter effectively eliminates cholera, typhoid, E. coli, amoebic dysentery, botulism, streptococcus, salmonella, and many other bacterial contaminants. Compassion Water of Life units are easy to set-up and maintain. A new system can be installed and ready to use in five minutes and with simple maintenance, Compassion Water of Life never needs replacing. When the water stops flowing the filter only needs to be rinsed - a process that takes less than a minute. The Compassion Water of Life units have been proven and tested by doctors, the United Nations and other NGOs. They remove 99.9 per cent of bacterial contaminants in water. PREVIOUS INITIATIVES In February 2013, Compassion implemented Water of Life for the first time in Guatemala. 1,000 filters were distributed to families in 6 projects around the country. After the distribution of filters and training, project staff found that: 95 per cent of families were using the filters. 87 per cent of the families were keeping the filter in a proper place and storing the water in clean containers. 80 per cent of families were washing their hands before eating, after using the bathroom and when dirty. There was a reduction in gastrointestinal diseases; by 54 per cent in one project and 100 per cent in another. 4 Interim report for initiative GU-014771

650 families received hygiene training on the importance of using purified water Some of the beneficiary families with their new Water of Life filters 5 Interim report for initiative GU-014771

Mothers attended the hygiene training and participated in various ways All attendants received printed materials to take home from the hygiene training 650 families have received the Water of Life filters and are using this blessing in their homes 6 Interim report for initiative GU-014771

BUDGET ITEM GRANT REQUESTED GRANT SPENT GRANT REMAINING 650 water filters 20,116 20,116-40 drill bits 37 37 - Travel expenses ( 317 local contribution) - - Sanitation and hygiene instructor Sanitation and hygiene training 1,146 1,146-860 718 142 Unforeseen expenses 441-441 Administration 5,650 5,650 - TOTAL 28,250 ( 317 local contribution) 27,667 583 The cost for purchasing a unit, transporting it to a family, and giving them training on the proper use of it is 43.46. This RESPOND Initiative will therefore enable 650 Compassion children and their families to benefit from Compassion s Water of Life programme. The unit price also covers the time needed for Compassion staff to monitor and manage the initiative. FINAL REMARKS Thank you for funding this RESPOND Initiative. Compassion Guatemala will continue monitoring the use and effectiveness of the Water of Life units until early 2016. If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact Mark Preston on 07830 791 899 or at MarkP@compassionuk.org. i WHO & UNICEF, 2012, Progress on Drinking Water and Sanitation: Joint Monitoring Programme 2012. ii UNDP, 2005, Health, Dignity and Development: What Will it Take? Earthscan, London. iii UNDP, Human Development Reports, Guatemala. Available from: hdr.undp.org/en/countries/profiles/gtm iv UNICEF, Country Statistics: Guatemala. Available from: unicef.org/infobycountry/guatemala_statistics.html v WHO and UN partners, Country statistics and global health estimates. Available from: http://www.who.int/gho/countries/gtm.pdf?ua=1 vi JMP, 2014, Guatemala: Estimates on the use of Water Sources and Sanitation Facilities (1980-2012). Available from: http://www.wssinfo.org/documents/?tx_displaycontroller%5btype%5d=country_files vii World Food Programme, Guatemala: Overview. Available from: wfp.org/countries/guatemala/overview 7 Interim report for initiative GU-014771