FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
CONTACT:
April 22, 2004
USAID and Partners Form a $5
Million Alliance for Safe Drinking
Water
Safe Drinking Water Alliance
Launched at the United Nations
NEW
YORK – A strategic public-private
collaboration devoted to ensuring safe drinking water was officially launched
today at the United Nations’ Commission on Sustainable Development meeting in
New York. The Safe Drinking Water Alliance will
receive $1.4 million over the next 18 months from the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) through the Global Development Alliance, an
initiative to promote partnerships such as this in the developing world. USAID’s financial contribution is
leveraging substantial in-kind and financial contributions from Procter &
Gamble (estimated at approximately $3.5 million), as well as technical and
program support resources from other partners.
The Alliance is designed to
develop innovative approaches for ensuring the safety of drinking water. USAID, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health/Center for Communication Programs (CCP), CARE, Population Services
International (PSI), and Procter & Gamble joined forces to leverage their
respective expertise and resources to better understand the behaviors and
motivations for choosing particular technologies for treating household water,
to share the knowledge gained, and identify opportunities for scaling up
successful efforts to ensure safe drinking water.
“We are delighted to support the Safe Drinking Water Alliance
to help make water safe in
Haiti,
Pakistan, and
elsewhere,” said Holly Wise, director of
USAID’s Global Development Alliance (GDA). “This unique public-private partnership
pools resources to attack a problem responsible for the death of an estimated
5,000 children per day around the globe, and USAID is proud to be a contributing
partner.”
About 1.1 billion
people around the globe lack access to an improved water source, and even for
those who do, unsanitary handling and storage means household water for drinking
and food preparation is often unsafe.
Unsafe water, sanitation and hygiene practices cause the vast majority of
diarrheal diseases, a leading killer of children under five that accounts for
approximately 2 million child deaths every year. Water-borne infections such as cholera,
typhoid fever, and dysentery also burden the public health system and impose
significant economic losses.
Low-cost solutions
can dramatically improve the quality of existing household water used for
drinking and cooking. Procter &
Gamble has developed a new product, PUR, which purifies water using technology
that has been found to be effective in improving water quality and preventing
disease at the household level in developing countries. Reductions of 30% to 50%
in diarrheal disease have been documented using such point-of-use treatment
approaches, with even higher reductions during epidemic water-borne disease
outbreaks.
The
Alliance will test the
acceptance of P&G’s water treatment product using different approaches
tailored to country need. Using
these technologies in combination with behavior change strategies will help
ensure safe water practices are sustained at the household level over the long
term.
The
Alliance members belong to the
International Network to Promote Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage, a
global network of more than 20 organizations that recognizes the potential for
using low-cost water quality interventions to reduce the risk of diarrhea
disease and death. The
Alliance will begin work in
Pakistan,
Haiti, and another
to-be-determined country where an emergency limits access to safe drinking
water.
Pakistan
A commercial market approach
will be implemented in Pakistan to leverage the technology
innovation and distribution and marketing infrastructure of the private sector
with the advocacy, education, and research efforts of collaborating groups to
build awareness of the need to properly treat and store water. Specific activities will include the
creation of a local Safe Drinking Water Council to build awareness of the causes
and consequences of unsafe drinking water as well as building awareness of
effective approaches to provide safe drinking water.
Haiti
Hopkins’
CCP will use behavior change communication combined with PSI’s social marketing
approach to provide safe drinking water in
Haiti. This social model approach is more
appropriate in countries where economic and infrastructure constraints limit the
commercial model. The model
involves the use of established social marketing distribution channels by
non-profit organizations as well as a social network approach with local NGOs
and Ministries of Health.
Emergency
Relief
CARE will test and refine a
package that can be easily and rapidly deployed in emergencies to ensure access
to safe water for those affected. This approach will be used in a country
soon to be determined. Tens of
millions of people lack access to safe drinking water each year because of
either natural disasters or armed conflicts that result in internally displaced
people or refugee situations.
END
USAID
is an independent
agency of the U.S.
government that provides economic, development and humanitarian assistance
around the world in support of the foreign policy goals of the
United
States. USAID has offices in
Washington
DC
and in over 80 countries worldwide.
The Global Development Alliance represents
an important new business model for USAID. GDA mobilizes the ideas, efforts, and
resources of governments, businesses, and civil society by forging
public-private alliances to stimulate economic growth, develop businesses and
workforces, address health and environmental issues, and expand access to
education and technology. Responding to the fact that the majority of resource
flows from the developed to the developing world is through private channels,
not government, this approach extends USAID’s reach and effectiveness in meeting
development objectives by combining its strengths with the resources and
capabilities of other prominent actors. USAID’s Bureau for Global Health has made water
quality improvement a key component of its environmental health agenda, working
with the GDA as well as private sector commercial and non-profit partners and
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. USAID’s Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance
(OFDA) provides humanitarian assistance to save lives, alleviate human
suffering, and reduce the social and economic impact of natural and man-made
disasters worldwide. http://www.usaid.gov/our_work/
USAID Press
Contact:
Harry
Edwards
202-712-5174
(hedwards@usaid.gov)
Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Communication Programs (CCP)
is a pioneer in the field of strategic, research-based communication for
behavior change and health promotion that has helped transform the theory and
practice of public health. http://www.jhuccp.org/.
John Hopkins Press Contact:
Kim Martin
410-659-6140
(kmartin@jhuccp.org)
CARE is an
independent humanitarian organization working to end world poverty. CARE’s
mission is to serve individuals and families in the poorest communities in the
world. CARE provides emergency food
and shelter to survivors of natural disasters, wars, and conflicts. CARE works with communities long after
initial relief efforts are completed and supports initiatives to enable people
to rebuild their lives and to face the future with renewed confidence. Whether supporting primary health care,
promoting sustainable agriculture, or developing savings and loan schemes, the
programs promote positive and lasting change and reduce long-term
dependency. CARE has extensive
experience with developmental and emergency water, sanitation, and hygiene
promotion. CARE’s contribution to this initiative will include experience gained
from promoting hygiene in emergencies and from working with CDC in
Madagascar and
Kenya on
household water treatment in both rural and urban settings. http://www.care.org/
CARE Press Contact:
Lurma Rackley
404-681-2552 Ext 450
(lrackley@care.org)
Population
Services International (PSI)
Through its health social marketing programs in almost 70 countries on five
continents, PSI distributes affordable, accessible, and attractive health
products and services, and motivates other types of healthy behavior. PSI raises awareness of health problems
and generates demand for the health products and services it provides through
innovative and culturally sensitive communication. PSI works in HIV/AIDS prevention, family
planning, malaria prevention, safe water, diarrhea prevention and management and
micronutrient supplementation.
http://www.psi.org
Populations Services
International Press Contact:
David Olson
202-785-0072
(dolson@psi.org.)
Procter &
Gamble (P&G) is one of the largest consumer products companies in the
world. The company has nearly
98,000 employees working in almost 80 countries worldwide. Two billion times a day, P&G brands
touch the lives of people around the world. P&G provides technical, marketing,
and research and development capabilities in relation to its new in-home water
purification technology. The
technology was developed in cooperation with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and has been shown to significantly reduce diarrheal illness in the
developing world. More information
about the technology can be found at http://www.pghsi.com/.
Procter & Gamble Press
Contact:
Greg Allgood 513-884-0958 cell 513-983-1223
office allgood.gs@pg.com