WASH Support For Typhoon Affected Communities
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Non Profit
Sanitation, Hygiene and Water Mission by Global Organization Working to Rehabilitate Eastern Samar,Philippines After Yolanda
In Barangay (village) Mabuhay, Eastern Samar, "mother leaders" know wellness best.
After super typhoon "Yolanda" (international name: Haiyan) hit the province and initial relief efforts were carried out, nongovernment organizations are now in the long-term recovery phase. One of these groups is Food for the Hungry, a global organization supported by Coca-Cola Femsa Philippines and Coca-Cola Foundation, which has been tapping barrio mothers to carry out the mission of sanitation.
Lawrence Espina, health sector head of Food for the Hungry, explains that the first thing they had to address was providing potable water. "Next is to teach good hygiene, which is usually neglected in times of calamity."
The mother leader campaign is part of a cascade-type program called WASH, which stands for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene. Espina chooses several mothers in a purok to be trained as mother leaders. They are taught basic health and hygiene practices through lectures and flip charts translated into Filipino.
These mother leaders then pass on the information to nine other mothers, making up a "Neighbors Circle." It pretty much works like folklore, it spreads through word of mouth.
We recently visited Barangay Mabuhay, a sunny coastal town of 4,400 families where most residents earn through fishing and farming. It is an adopted municipality where Food for the Hungry has set up a multipurpose center, which serves as a makeshift classroom and playground for kids, and a venue for WASH lectures.
There were 29 mother leaders in Barangay Mabuhay. One of them was Maricel Santos Pardilan, 44, a grandmother who used to run a sari-sari store before Yolanda hit the town. She now keeps herself busy as a mother leader, teaching hygiene to families and neighbors.
Contamination
"We were taught to wash hands in flowing water from the faucet, or to use a tabo (dipper)," she says. "We used to just dip our hands in a shared basin of water, and that may cause contamination. We were also taught how to filter water for drinking."
Young mother Katrina Arpon, 23, says she teaches kids to wash hands before eating because they usually get distracted after playing.
Coca-Cola Femsa has donated P3 million to Food for the Hungry for the Samar health programs. It also provided mobile emergency water-treatment plant that can produce 32,000 liters of water a day in preparation for future calamities.
Read More Related Content On This Topic - Click Here
Media
Taxonomy
- Public Health
- Human Rights