Saturday, July 19, 2008

Our Mission

USC Hubli Water and Health Project: Mission
This is a compiled work put together by the USC Team. We hope that it gives our support team better insight to what we desire to accomplish during our time in Hubli.


The World Health Organization has reported that 88% of the 1.8 million deaths resulting from diarrhea can be attributed to unsafe water or inadequate hygiene or sanitation. Unfortunately, a significant population in the city of Hubli, India is victim to these causes, and isn't even aware of it.

The USC Hubli Water and Health Team is in Hubli this summer to implement a project model that will improve these statistics in the community. Their team of six members, visiting from the University of Southern California in the United States, will guide a pilot project in the under-served community of S.M. Krishna Nagar. Over the course of the next year the Team will employ local college students to maintain the program and monitor the efficiency of the Team’s water purification technology. Subsidizing the cost for those living within this community, the Team will be providing state-of-the-art purification systems at affordable prices, creating an important sense of ownership and empowerment for the owners of these important devices.

The Team likewise desires to build awareness within the local community about the need to drink purified water. While the source of water they currently receive from the Hubli-Dharwad Municipal Corporation (HDMC) is filtered, sewage leakage or the poor management of waste often contaminates drinking water on its way. While the water from these pipes or the bore wells may look clean, it can be hazardous to drink. Even water contained in holding tanks on vehicles which visit the community is by no means guaranteed to be of sufficient, purified quality. The tanks carrying the water are rarely cleaned and the taps through which the water is dispersed may easily be contaminated. Families must be aware that the water they are provided is harmful to their health and is also a catalyst for breeding mosquitoes carrying malaria and other transferable diseases. Local reports have proven this, as communities in the past have fallen victim to water-related illnesses as a result of their consumption of unclean water. The USC Team hopes to shed light on this threatening issue, as confronting the challenge of dirty drinking water is a "gateway" step towards achieving measured, sustainable improvements in a wide array of serious health related issues. Through education at key points of community influence and the measured introduction of new technologies that encourage responsibility over simply charity, the Team will use its time in Hubli to affect change that is both scalable and sustainable.

4 comments:

Daniel Bachhuber said...

What is access to water like in terms of quantity? Does everyone have equal access to enough water in this community, or do the poor buy from the rich?

Kimberly Lewkowitz said...

Currently households within this community only receive water on avg. every 8 days. The water arrives from the Hubli Dharwad Municipal Corp. (HDMC) or in a truck. When families run out of water they either travel for 1hr to Islampur to collect water and bring it back, or they use the bore well water. We are trying to improve the community's access to clean water. We will not be able to change their scare availability of water but at least we can protect each family from disease by purifying their supply of drinking water. By educating them on pollution control, etc, the stream which is nearby and is currently black in color, may not attract mosquitoes carrying malaria. Our educational topics + water purification systems will help to minimize/eliminate the chances of an outbreak of a water borne disease from occuring within the community. In an area where people are desperate for water they sometimes fail to filter the water b/c they need it desperately or just simply run out of time. We would like to spread knowledge about a variety of issues related to both water and health.
Thanks for reading our blog!

Billy said...

Kimmie -

these streams look treacherous and I am sure that you have seen Indian people using them for everything from urinating to bathing their children, feeding their dog and washing their clothes. These things in 3rd world countries just blow us away! I am so proud of you g. keep it up.

Alice C. Parker said...

Hi Team,
I am so proud of your efforts!! Keep us posted on your progress. I found out about this project on CNN!

Prof. Parker
EE, USC