WaterAid Nepal steps up efforts to prevent cholera crisis
KATHMANDU, Nepal, May 5, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- WaterAid Nepal has stepped up efforts to prevent the spread of cholera, typhoid and other waterborne diseases by providing both public health radio programming, and water, sanitation and hygiene services to people living in the districts hardest-hit by the recent earthquake.
Water and sanitation infrastructure has been severely damaged by the earthquake, leaving many people without clean water and nowhere safe to go to the toilet. In these conditions, there is high risk of an outbreak of waterborne diseases such as cholera, typhoid and diarrhea that could lead to a second humanitarian crisis in the affected regions.
Over the weekend, WaterAid worked with long-time partner organizations to deliver water purification tablets to 4,565 people that will last for the next 10 days. Included in this number were 1,300 children whose families were given water purification supplies as part of a Ministry of Health emergency vaccination program.
WaterAid expects to reach thousands more in coming days as further supplies are received, including emergency community water filters, water purification tablets, hygiene kits containing buckets, soap, cloths and sanitary napkins. Additional work is underway to install emergency sanitation measures such as pit latrines and trenches.
WaterAid Nepal has also launched a series of radio broadcasts that urge survivors to take extra precautions with water, personal hygiene and in toilet use to help prevent the spread of cholera, typhoid and other waterborne diseases. The messages, carried by national radio, urge listeners to boil milk and water before drinking, wash hands with soap frequently and properly dispose of human waste.
"We are and remain an organization that is focused on development work, but the scale of need following the earthquake is such in Nepal that we and our partners feel compelled to act. We know that we must act now to try and avoid a second disaster in the form of an outbreak of disease such as cholera," said Tom Palakudiyil, WaterAid's Head of Region for South Asia.
"WaterAid has a long history of working in the affected areas. Through our partners, we have an established network through which we can help provide emergency water and sanitation."
Recently ranked by GuideStar's Philanthropedia as the number one international non-profit working in the water and sanitation sector, WaterAid has been active in Nepal since 1987. An estimated 60,000 people have been affected in the communities where WaterAid works, including Gorkha district, the epicenter of the earthquake. More than 7,500 people are now known to have died, with the UN estimating more than 8 million people have been affected.
"We must not underestimate the huge challenges ahead. Many of the affected areas are remote and had very little infrastructure before [the earthquake]. Much of what infrastructure there is will have been destroyed. Getting to the affected districts will be challenging, as will bringing in the equipment needed to rebuild," commented Palakudiyil.
"But WaterAid is here for the long term and committed to helping help rebuild Nepal, better and stronger than before."
Those interested in making a donation to WaterAid's on-the-ground work in Nepal are encouraged to do so online at: www.wateraid.org/us/get-involved/nepal-earthquake
For interview requests and more information please contact Carolynne Wheeler, WaterAid news manager, in Nepal: +977 981 315 5322 or by email: [email protected].
In London please contact our WaterAid UK press team at: [email protected] or media lead Fiona Callister: [email protected] or +44 (0)207 793-5022 or after hours +44 (0)78 87 521 552.
In New York please contact our WaterAid America media and communications officer, Alanna Imbach: [email protected] or + 1 (212) 683-0430
Note to editors
- WaterAid has a physical presence in 28 districts across Nepal
- Before the disaster, nearly 13 million people in Nepal were without access to a basic, safe toilet and 3.6 million were without access to clean water.
- An estimated 1,900 children under five die each year in Nepal of diseases linked to a lack of safe water, basic sanitation and good hygiene practice.
- To read more about WaterAid's Nepal appeal, see: www.wateraid.org/us/get-involved/nepal-earthquake
About WaterAid
WaterAid is an international non-profit organization dedicated to helping the world's poorest people gain access to safe water and sanitation. WaterAid works in 26 countries across Africa, Asia, Central America and the Pacific region. Since 1981, WaterAid has reached 21 million people with safe water and, since 2004, 18 million people with toilets and sanitation. www.wateraid.org
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SOURCE WaterAid
Related Links
http://www.wateraidamerica.org
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