Procter and Gamble (P&G) has
reiterated its commitment to save one life every hour in the developing world
by delivering more than 2billion liters of clean drinking water every year by
2020 to help save an estimated 10,000 lives and prevent 80 million days of
diarrheal illness on an annual basis.
Statistics from World Health
organization (WHO) indicates that over 1billion people lack access to clean
drinking water and approximately 1,600 children die daily from complications
resulting from water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea, typhoid, cholera,
dysentery and fever. This staggering figure is more than that from HIV/AIDS and
malaria combined.
The company initiated a program dubbed
Children’s Safe Drinking Water (CSDW) in 2004 through its water purifying
technology that cleans and purifies water as well as stops the water from
re-contamination. This is done using a simple sachet known as P&G Purifier
of Water (previously Pur) which uses the technology that is in municipal water
treatments.
In Kenya, P&G runs the programs
mostly in Nyanza, Western and Coast provinces where there is adequate water
which is however not clean. So far, the company has distributed approximately
70 million sachets which in turn has helped provide 700 million liters of clean
drinking water in Kenya since the program begun.
The
Program which works with over 140 partners across the globe in over 75
countries provides clean water to people in need through outreach programs for
mothers in health clinics as well as students in school. It also responds to
emergencies including cholera outbreaks, earthquakes, floods and other natural
disasters.
The cleaning water process involves adding
the four grams of powder found in P&G purifier of water sachet to ten
litres of turbid water. The product visually cleans the water removing
pathogenic microorganisms, viruses, parasites and suspended matter from the
contaminated water, leaving it safe for families to drink. It removes more than
99.99999% of common waterborne bacteria helping to reduce diarrheal disease
incidence in the developing world.
P&G communications Manager Irene
Mwathi, said safe drinking water and sanitation is a huge challenge to humanity
due to high levels of poverty in the developing world. “Clean water is a basic
need for human life and one of the millennium development goals that Kenya is
striving to achieve, we are therefore glad to share a solution towards
mitigating this problem,” she added.
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