Creating Safe Drinking Water is Not Rocket Science

March 18th, 2008 at 11:16 am | posted by ONE.Partners

4-USAID-South_Africa_200Although many of us know that water is a scarce resource in our world, few people know that more than 5,000 children under the age of 5 die each day due to lack of access to clean and safe drinking water. That’s nearly 2 million children each year. On World Water Day, we need to remember these children and their families.

Although I have worked in healthcare for more than 30 years, I didn’t know the depth of the crisis of poor sanitation and dangerous water. I was shocked at these statistics when I came to the US Coalition for Child Survival in 2006.

In 2005, I paid a visit to the Children’s Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan. Afghanistan has one of the worst infant, child and maternal mortality statistics in the developing world. Although improvements have been made in the last few years, there continues to be a crisis there. 2-AED_USAID-NepalWhen I visited Children’s Hospital of Kabul, I found that each day nearly 1,000 children come to the clinic seeking help. The hospital, at that time, didn’t have clean water or working sanitation. Babies were sharing incubators and the food was horrible. Many children showed up due to malnutrition, dehydration and illnesses related to unsafe drinking water.

I saw so much pain in the faces of the children and families during my two weeks in Kabul.

1-WV_USAID-GhanaCreating safe drinking water and making it accessible to children and families is not rocket science. We’re not waiting for any new inventions or technology. The cost is low and the results are truly life-saving. Access to clean water and sanitation can help prevent Diarrheal Disease, one of the leading causes of death among children under 5. Read our fact sheet and learn more about the causes, solutions and success stories. Download our fact sheet at here.

You can make a difference and the support of the ONE Campaign has already generated more than 200,000 letters to Congress to support the Global Child Survival Act. Our website has all the information and details on the causes and solutions to the global child survival crisis.

You can also learn more about safe drinking water here. Watch the flash program and get all the facts!

-Andrew Barrer, Executive Director, US Coalition for Child Survival

2 Responses to “Creating Safe Drinking Water is Not Rocket Science”

  1. Debbie K Says:

    Thanks Andrew for drawing to our attention here in the ONE blog the ESSENTIAL role that clean water sources have for basic child survival & for longterm economic development around the world.

    Probably the largest area of need that still deserves more attention and MORE FUNDING in our federal budget is the area of basic sanitation for the world’s poorest regions.

    It is important to mention that March 22 is World Water Day as established by the U.N. I hope that people will be so moved by your post here and especially by the pictures of these beautiful children with their happy faces while partaking of clean water will motivate all of us to redouble our efforts to do all that we can to make that dream of clean water a reality for the world’s children and their families.

    LOVE AND PEACE. HOPE AND JOY. MERCY AND GRACE.

    ALWAYS LOVE, ONLY LOVE, ONE LOVE - debbie :)

  2. Ashoka's Changemakers Says:

    Cast Your Vote in The Global Competition — Tapping Local Innovation: Unclogging the Water and Sanitation Crisis

    Ashoka’s Changemakers and Global Water Challenge invite you to vote for the most innovative approaches to providing access to safe drinking water and sanitation worldwide.

    We’ve received 265 entries from 54 countries, and 9 finalists were chosen for their pioneering ideas:

    1. Naandi Foundation, India
    2. WaterParterns, United States
    3. City Garbage Recyclers, Kenya
    4. Ecotact – Innovating Sanitation, Kenya
    5. Swayam Shikshan Prayog, India
    6. Himanshu Parikh Consulting Engineers, India
    7. The Clean Shop, South Africa
    8. Centre for Community Organisation and Development, Malawi
    9. Manna Energy Foundation, United States

    Now we need your help: Log onto www.changemakers.net, read through these inventive solutions and select your 3 favorites by May 11. The three winners will each receive $5,000.

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