'Diarrhoea kills more young children than AIDS, malaria and measles combined': How the LifeStraw hopes to save millions of lives. 'An
estimated 884 million people in the world, 37 per cent of whom live in
Sub-Saharan Africa, still use unimproved sources of drinking water.
'Lack
of access to safe drinking water contributes to the staggering burden
of diarrhoeal diseases worldwide, particularly affecting the young, the
immunocompromised 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 combined .
'In
many rural and urban areas of the developing world, household
water-quality interventions can reduce diarrhoea morbidity by more than
40 per cent. Treating water in the home offers the opportunity for
significant health gains at potentially dramatic cost savings over
conventional improvement in water supplies, such as piped water
connections to households.
'Water filters have been shown to be the most effective interventions amongst all point-of-use water. treatment methods for reducing diarrhoeal diseases.
'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. LifeStraw® and LifeStraw® Family are both
point-of-use water interventions – truly unique offerings from
Vestergaard Frandsen that address the concern for affordably obtaining
safe drinking water at home and outside.
'These
complementary safe water tools have the potential to accelerate
progress towards the MDG target of providing access to safe drinking
water, which would yield health and economic benefits; thus contributing
to the achievement of other MDGs like poverty reduction, childhood
survival, school attendance, gender equality and environment
sustainability.'
Now available to buy online via Firebox, the 22cm-long LifeStrawwas
originally developed by Danish manufacturers in 2005 as a solution to
the devastating problem of unsafe drinking water in the Third World,
where one child dies every 15 seconds as a result of drinking dirty
water.
That year it was named Best Invention
of 2005 by Time Magazine and Invention of the Century by Gizmag, and in
2006 it was heralded by the New York Times as 'a water purifier that
could save lives'. Forbes Magazine called it 'one of the ten things that
will change the way we live'. The
straw's powerful purification pipe removes 99.9999 per cent of
water-borne bacteria plus many other parasites, including E-coli,
campylobacter, vibrio cholerae, pseudomonas aeruginosa, shigella and
salmonella. And it will
safely filter at least 1000 litres of water. (There are only about 13 in
your toilet cistern, so plenty to go around.)
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