"Now, after using the treated water my whole family is healthy." - Dima Dabaso
In Ethiopia, where water is dangerously scarce, water found in the
local pond may be contaminated. Parents often have little choice but to
bring it home for their thirsty children to drink who need it to
survive.
This potentially deadly situation is all-too-common for
families in Borena, an impoverished region in southern Ethiopia, where
hundreds of thousands of people suffer as a result of water shortages
caused by catastrophic drought. Drinking untreated water increases the
risk for diarrheal disease that can be deadly -- especially for children
and adults with immune systems weakened by malnutrition.
To help thousands of families affected by the Horn of Africa
drought and famine, AmeriCares donated more than three million sachets
of PUR water purification tablets for camps and communities in Kenya and
Ethiopia. At the height of the emergency, one million of the sachets
were delivered to our partner in the region, Oxfam and their local
partners to be used in a program aimed at providing thousands of
Ethiopian families with clean, treated water for three months.
Oxfam
and its local partners carefully selected the most vulnerable families
from severely impoverished communities to receive the purification
sachets and other hygiene items, along with crucial health education.
During the distribution, men, women and children received hands-on
training on how to properly use the sachets, and learned about the
importance of treating water and effective methods to reduce the risk of
infection and diarrheal disease.
Read more@trust.org
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