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SAAF- Pakistan Flood Relief
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Sadqa, Amana and Farz (SAAF) - these words all add up to our responsibility to others. We at TAP H2O, along with our supporters, believe that innocent lives lost as a result of preventable water-borne diseases is a travesty and we have a moral driver (sadqa) and obligation (farz) entrusted to us (amana) as privileged members of privileged societies in privileged countries to help those in need. Through SAAF, TAP H2O's Pakistan Flood Relief Project, we are raising funds to purchase microbiological water purification systems to help those inneed of clean and safe drinking water. We are working with the manufacturer of LifeStraw® units, Vestergaard-Frandsen SA, for the supply of units that are being distributed to flood victims in Pakistan. Through Karachi Relief Trust, an humanitarian organisation based in Pakistan, and its Pak Pani Project, LifeStraw® units are being deployed where they are needed most.
LifeStraw® is a portable microbiological water filter that effectively removes all bacteria and parasites responsible for causing common diarrhoeal diseases. LifeStraw® requires no electrical power or spare parts and can be carried around for easy access to safe and clean water. LifeStraw® effectively removes minimum 99.9999% of all waterborne bacteria, including Escherichia coli, Campylobacter, Vibrio cholerae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Shigella and Salmonella and removes minimum 99.9% of waterborne protozoan parasites, including Giardia lamblia, Cryptosporidium Parvum and Entamoeba histolytica. |
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To find out more about how you can help us help others, please contact us at
To date, we have accomplished a significant milestone by raising enough money to buy, distribute and deploy 1,300 LifeStraw® Family Units, providing immediate relief to flood victims who can now access safe drinking water, without use of harmful chemicals and without adding the environmental burden imposed by bottled water. Our challenge does not stop here!
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The Health Impact of Water Filtration
The Cochrane Collaboration published a review of 38 randomised, controlled trials of various water quality interventions (including chlorination, flocculation/disinfection and water filters) to prevent diarrhoea ("Interventions to Improve Water Quality for Preventing Diarrhoea", 2006). ( LifeStraw® Brochure, p.5 ) The study covered over 53,000 subjects from 19 countries for 20 years at both point-of-source and point-of-use household-level interventions. Its objective was to assess the effectiveness of interventions to improve water quality for preventing diarrhoea. It concluded that household interventions were twice as effective in preventing diarrhoea as common source-based interventions (e.g., wells, boreholes and communal tap stands). Most significantly, it concluded that among household interventions, filters were consistently the most effective in preventing diarrhoea, with an average 63% reduction.
International Efforts and LifeStraw®
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) call for a reduction of the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water by half between 1990 and 2015. Yet, an estimated 884 million people in the world, 37% of whom live in Sub-Saharan Africa, still use unimproved sources of drinking water1.
Lack of access to safe drinking water contributes to the staggering burden of diarrhoeal diseases worldwide, particularly affecting the young, the immuno-compromised and the poor. Nearly one in five child deaths (about 1.5 million each year) is due to diarrhoea. Diarrhoea kills more young children than AIDS, malaria and measles combined2. Drinking contaminated water also leads to reduced personal productive time, with widespread economic effects. Approximately 43% of the global population, especially the lower-income populace in the remote and rural parts of the developing world, is deprived of household safe piped water. Thus, there is a pressing need for effective and affordable options for obtaining safe drinking water at home.
Point-of-use (POU) treatment is an alternative approach, which can accelerate the health gains associated with the provision of safe drinking water to the at-risk populations. It empowers people to control the quality of their drinking water. Treating water at the household level or other point of use also reduces the risk of waterborne disease arising from recontamination during collection, transport, and use in the home, a well-known cause of water-quality degradation3. In many rural and urban areas of the developing world, household water-quality interventions can reduce diarrhoea morbidity by more than 40%4,5. Treating water in the home offers the opportunity for significant health gains at potentially dramatic cost savings over conventional improvements in water supplies, such as piped water connections to households6. Water filters have been shown to be the most effective interventions amongst all point-of-use water treatment methods for reducing diarrhoeal diseases7.
The Cochrane review demonstrates that it is not enough to treat water at the point-of-source; it must also be made safe at the point-of-consumption.
References
1. WHO and UNICEF. 2008.
Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation
2. UNICEF and WHO. 2009.
Diarrhoea: Why children are still dying and what can be done
3. Wright, J. et al.
2003. Household drinking water in developing countries: a systematic review of
microbiological contamination between source and point-of-use. Trop Med Int
Health 9: 106 – 117
4. Ghislaine, R and
Clasen, T. 2010. Estimating the Scope of Household Water Treatment in Low- and
Medium-Income Countries. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 82(2), pp. 289–300
5. Fewtrell, L. et al. 2005.
Water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions to reduce diarrhea in less
developed countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet
Infectious Diseases (5): 42–52
6. International Finance
Corporation (World Bank Group). Safe Water for All: Harnessing the Private
Sector to Reach the Underserved
7. Clasen, T. et al. 2006.
Interventions to improve water quality for preventing diarrhoea (Review):The
Cochrane Collaboration
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| To purchase LifeStraw® personal water purification units or LifeStraw® Family units for your own use or as a gift, please follow the LifeStraw® Link below. |
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Your donation will help to relieve water poverty by supplying the resources to obtain and sustain clean water.
£30 buys a LifeStraw® Family Unit providing 5 people with safe drinking water for 3 years
£10 buys a portable individual LifeStraw® providing one person with safe drinking water for 1 year |
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We Did It! See Our Progress Here
With the help of TAP H2O's partners and hundreds of generous donors including many anonymous donors, the SAAF Project, has so far raised enough money to buy over 1,300 water purification devices for flood victims in Pakistan. To find out how you can help us help others, please contact us. |
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| Bassett House School
in West London has joined TAP H2O to |
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raise funds for children in need of safe-drinking water.
Find out how your school can help too. |
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