Water purifying system could save lives in developing countries
Sarah Macdonald London
An affordable system to bring safe water to individual households in
developing countries could save millions of lives, according to Population
Services International, a non-profit organisation based in Washington, DC.
The Safe Water System, developed by the US Center for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), in partnership with the World Health Organization and the Pan
American Health Organization, uses a dilute sodium hypochlorite solution and
community education techniques to bring clean water to poor communities. The
system also recommends storing water in containers with a narrow mouth to
prevent recontamination.
"The worst aspect of dirty water is that it gives diarrhoeal diseases to
children. Some four to five billion episodes of diarrhoea yearly cause 2.2
million child deaths under the age of five," said Sally Cowal, vice president of
Population Services International. Comprehensive testing of the Safe Water
System in six countries showed that it cut the rate of diarrhoea by 50% in
households where it was used.
Pilot programmes using the system are currently under way in 16 countries,
including Kenya, Zambia, and India. At the Third World Water Forumto be held in
Kyoto, Japan, next weekPopulation Services International, the CDC, and Unicef
will announce an initiative to expand these programmes to 23 nations and will be
seeking partners to help them.
"More than one billion people still lack access to safe water, despite
billions of dollars [having been] spent on water infrastructure in the
developing world," said Eric Mintz, chief of the CDCs diarrhoeal disease
epidemiology section. "The SWS [safe water system] provides immediate help to
people who have little reasonable prospect of safe water otherwise."
Dr Mintz said that the system had several advantages for people in developing
countries over the water purification tablets (calcium hypochlorite) that
travellers used when visiting such places. "It is easy to produce locally by
either electrolysis of a solution of salt water or by dilution of commercially
produced bleach," he said, which made it cheaper than tablets. Using a liquid
solution also meant there was less danger of people consuming it in error than
when using tablets.
Dr Mintz said the CDC carried out pilot studies of the system in the
mid-1990s. "Only after the approach was repeatedly demonstrated to reduce
diarrhoea and was shown to be feasible and economically sustainable on a large
scale over the next decade [did] the international water and sanitation
community come to accept it as a valid alternative and complementary approach to
the traditional, more costly, and time consuming measure of constructing
improved water resources and distribution systems," he said.
The CDC and Population Services International are encouraging the private
sector in each country to produce the bleach solution and the proper containers.
National governments will need to ensure that the bleach product is safe and
correctly formulated.
"The CDC firmly believes that people should pay for this product rather than
getting it free, because they will value it more and will therefore be more
likely to use it," said Dr Mintz. A monthly supply of dilute bleach will cost a
family $0.15 (£0.10; 0.14) to $0.30.
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