| Fact Sheet U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; U.S. Agency for International Development Washington, DC April 21, 2003 Safe Water System
The SWS is also used as an entry point into households for the promotion and implementation of other interventions. Other SWS applications include improving street vendor hygiene in beverage preparation, prevention of contamination of fluids used in re-hydrating cholera victims, and the prevention of diarrheal infections in persons with HIV/AIDS. Resources: U.S. government contributions have included financial support (from country missions of the United States Agency for International Development [USAID] and CDC/HHS) and technical support (from CDC/HHS). Civil society groups and international organizations have also provided financial support to projects in several countries. Partners: Governments: CDC/HHS, USAID, Ministries of Health in Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru, Guatemala, Zambia, Madagascar, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Malawi, Cote d'Ivoire, India, Laos, and Nepal; Centro Nacional de Enfermedades Tropicales (Bolivia), Instituto Nacional de Laboratorios de Salud (Bolivia), Tropical Diseases Research Center (Zambia), Centre National des Recherches sur l’Environnement (Madagascar), Uganda Viral Research Institute; and the Japan International Development Agency; International Organizations: UNICEF, WHO, World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, Centro Panamericano de Ingenieria Sanitaria y Ciencias del Ambiente (Peru); Private Sector: Proctor and Gamble Company, Equipment and Systems Engineering, Inc. (USA), Exceltec International Corp. (USA), Jet Chemicals, Ltd. (Kenya), SFOI (Madagascar), Sulforwanda Industries (Rwanda), Max Chemicals (India), Triveni Plastics (India), Nampak (South Africa), Magric Uganda, Ltd., Tarmal Industries, Ltd. (Tanzania), Simba Plastics Co., Ltd. (Tanzania), Kleemkem Ltd. (Malawi), Enterprise Plastics (Malawi), Plamat Cia. (Bolivia). Civil Society: Population Services International (PSI), CARE, Project Concern International, Plan International, Curamericas, Missions of Love (Haiti), ADRA, Catholic Relief Services, HOPE, Bibosi Institute (Bolivia), The AIDS Support Organization (Uganda), Sulabh International (India), International Buddhist Society (Nepal); Universities: Emory University School of Public Health, University of North Carolina School of Public Health, Medical University of South Carolina, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Aga Khan University (Pakistan), Universidad del Valle (Guatemala), and the Universidad Mayor de San Andres (Bolivia). Partnership Efforts to Date: Beginning in 1997, SWS projects have been initiated in Latin America and the Caribbean (Bolivia, Ecuador, Haiti, and Peru), Africa (Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia), and Asia (India, Laos, Nepal, and Pakistan). Field trials in these three continents have shown a reduction of risk of diarrhea from 30 to 85% following the implementation of SWS projects. The SWS has been used as an emergency response tool for earthquakes and flooding in Bolivia in 1997 and 1998, cholera epidemics in Madagascar in 2000 and Zambia in 1999, and flooding in Kenya in 2001 and Malawi in 2002. UNICEF, PSI, and CDC/HHS have developed a 20-country initiative to provide access to the SWS that was launched at the World Water Forum in Kyoto in March 2003. Planning is underway for SWS projects in Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria. CDC will join with WHO, PSI, UNICEF, NGOs, and Ministries in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Myanmar to organize an inter-country SWS project that could become a model for regional expansion in other parts of the world. A Network to Promote Safe Household Water Treatment and Storage has been established through a multi-sector partnership of over 30 organizations, with a secretariat based at the WHO Water, Sanitation, and Health Program. USG Primary Point of Contact: CDC/HHS: Robert Quick, MD, MPH (Phone: 404-639-2208 E-mail: rxq1@cdc.gov).
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