Health Communication Materials Database | M/MC ID# PO HAI 68 |
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| English Title: [Conserve water and so that you can drink it later : My family drinks treated water. How about yours?] Original Title: Konsève dlo pou n bwè a byen : Mwen ak fanmi m, nou bwè dlo trete. E ou menm? Series Title: | Safe Drinking Water Alliance (SDWA) | Media Format: Poster Date: 2005 Country: Haiti Subjects: Water, Sanitation, Hygiene, JHU/HCP Audience: General Languages: Haitian Creole Description: 56 x 67 cm. poster. White and blue background, color illustration of a woman using a laddle to get water out of large container with a man holding a cup standing beside her, color illustration of the same man drinking from his cup while the woman covers the container. Producers: Service and Development Agency (SADA), Health Communication Partnership (HCP), USAID Contact: Health Communication Partnership (HCP) 111 Market Place, Suite 310 Baltimore, Maryland 21202 United States of America Phone: 410-659-6300 Email: hcpinfo@jhuccp.org Website: http://www.hcpartnership.org
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|  | Notes: In 2003, CCP joined the Safe Drinking Water Alliance (SDWA), which includes Procter & Gamble (P&G), CARE and Population Services International (PSI). The Alliance works to further the use of point-of-use (POU) technologies globally. USAID's Global Development Alliance (GDA) is supporting SDWA in three countries— Pakistan , Haiti and Ethiopia . The primary beneficiaries of SDWA's activities are households... more Notes: In 2003, CCP joined the Safe Drinking Water Alliance (SDWA), which includes Procter & Gamble (P&G), CARE and Population Services International (PSI). The Alliance works to further the use of point-of-use (POU) technologies globally. USAID's Global Development Alliance (GDA) is supporting SDWA in three countries— Pakistan , Haiti and Ethiopia . The primary beneficiaries of SDWA's activities are households and families without access to potable water. The Alliance is testing three models to increase the use of POU water treatment technologies and create conditions for a sustained behavior for water treatment and proper storage. The three models are: 1) in Pakistan a full private sector commercial model; 2) in Haiti a social model to ensure the product reaches all segments of society; and 3) in Ethiopia an emergency relief model to ensure temporary access to safe water in the event of loss of access due to a humanitarian relief type of intervention. |Safe Drinking Water Alliance is working 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. In Haiti the Center for Communication Programs is using behavior change communication combined with PSI's social marketing approach to provide safe drinking water. 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. less
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