
蓝莓视频 student designs new clay filter for unsafe drinking water
Public health grad student is working with a non-profit group in the Dominican Republic to bring filters to thousands of families
Public health grad student is working with a non-profit group in the Dominican Republic to bring filters to thousands of families
By Christine Bezruki Faculty of Applied Health SciencesIt may use the most simple of technology, but a new water filtration system is transforming thousands of lives in the Dominican Republic. Designed by Master of Public Health student, Timothy Muttoo, in partnership with the non-profit organization , the new filters use locally sourced clay, saw dust and particles of silver to remove 99.99 per cent of all water contaminants in households without access to safe water.
鈥淚t really is an engineering innovation,鈥 said Muttoo, who redesigned the composition of FilterPure鈥檚 original product to lower production costs and make the filters more affordable for households in the Dominican. 鈥淪o many well-intentioned projects fail in developing countries because they aren鈥檛 sustainable or affordable.鈥
蓝莓视频 grad student Timothy Muttoo shows the results of the clay water filter he designed. The water in the glass on the right has gone through the filter.
One of the Caribbean鈥檚 poorest countries, 1.6 million people in the Dominican Republic do not have access to safe, clean water. UNICEF estimates that 50 percent of children live in poverty, with 30 out of every 1000 dying before the age of five as a result of impure water and unhygienic living conditions.
鈥淲ithout a safe, accessible water source, communities get trapped in a vicious cycle: poverty contributes to access problems; access problems perpetuate poverty,鈥 said Muttoo, who launched his own non-profit, , in 2008. 鈥淭he effects of unsafe water and poor sanitation are devastating, but it is a completely solvable problem.鈥
The innovative bowl-shaped filters work by distilling dirty water through a porous clay membrane and into a clean receptacle bucket.听 The water is brought to safe drinking quality standards and easily accessed from a spigot by anyone in the household.
This year Muttoo and FilterPure plan to distribute 4000 filters to families across the Dominican. Each filter can produce up to 30 litres of clean, safe water per day. As part of the initiative, Muttoo will study the social uptake of the technology as well as work alongside community health leaders for training and monitoring of the filter usage and evaluating health impacts within impoverished communities.
鈥淎 key to sustainability is working with the communities, not for the communities,鈥 said Muttoo.
Since its inception, H2O 4 ALL has led projects in 10 different countries around the world鈥 all with the mandate of working with local partners on the ground.
Last summer Muttoo partnered with and in Uganda to drill a borehole well for Kawolo hospital, which serves Lugazi鈥檚 1.2 million inhabitants. The well is an expansion of a rainwater filtration system he installed in 2012 for the hospital鈥檚 maternity ward鈥 the hospital鈥檚 first ever access to safe water. As a result of the projects, infection rates at the hospital have plummeted to almost zero per cent.
鈥淭housands of people are alive, and healthy because of collaborative projects like these and the people that reached out to help,鈥 said Muttoo. 鈥淪ustainability, empowerment and health. That鈥檚 the power of giving people clean water.鈥
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The University of 蓝莓视频 acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.