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Fact Training - Water and Sanitation, Geneva April - 2005 ‘meeting basic water and sanitation (WatSan) needs in post-disaster situations is crucial to save lives, control and prevent disease, reduce psychological stress and restore dignity’
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Fact Training - Water & Sanitation, Geneva April 2005 Coordinate & support WatSan Disaster Preparedness & Response (Acute WatSan Challenges) Provide strategic direction, technical and programming support to long-term WatSan Development (Chronic WatSan Challenges) Federation WatSan Objectives: At community, country, regional and international levels
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Fact Training - Water & Sanitation, Geneva April, 2005 WatSan Unit in Geneva/Regional & Country WatSan Delegates Existing NS capacities (NDRT & HR’s) Existing Regional Capacities (RDRT/RITS & equipment) FACT – assessment tools - WatSan Team members WatSan ERU’s & WatSan Delegate Deployments Standard kits and equipment & minimum standards (SPHERE) Other players (e.g. ICRC, Oxfam, Unicef, WHO etc.) Federation WatSan Response Tools & Mechanisms: For effective Disaster Response – all the above must be considered
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Fact Training - Water & Sanitation, Geneva April 2005 Provision of safe, adequate water (drinking/cooking, bathing & laundry) and sanitation/solid waste disposal for the population & key structures (clinics, hospitals, feeding centres, markets, schools etc.) Vector control (flies, mosquitoes, rats, fleas & lice) Surface water drainage/runoff Medical/hazardous waste disposal & disposal of the dead Health promotion & campaigns/targeting most vulnerable Coordinate with RC/RC, ICRC and other WatSan players Capacity building – NS’s and the Community – Plan reconstruction Federation WatSan Priorities & Responsibilities, Post-Disaster: Depending upon the context, Federation may not cover all these responsibilities
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Fact Training - Water & Sanitation, Geneva April 2005 Diarrhoea (common, acute, bloody/mucus, cholera, typhoid) Bilharzia, Hepatitis, river blindness Worm infestations, scabies, other skin diseases, trachoma Malaria, Dengue, yellow fever Parasite infestations, bubonic plague, Hemorrhagic fevers Danger of contamination from medical waste Danger of contamination from dead bodies Water stress/civil unrest from lack of adequate & equitable distribution Common WatSan Related Diseases/Threats:
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Fact Training - Water & Sanitation, Geneva April 2005 Basic WatSan for health structures & RC/RC staff, volunteers & Delegates Basic WatSan for general population but targeting problem areas or threats Coordination, planning, procurement/HR’s and RC/RC volunteer mobilisation Three Most Common WatSan Priorities:
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Existing Water Supplies – Rehabilitation/Extension
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Existing Water Supplies – Treatment Plant
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Water Sources - Surface
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Surface Water Intake
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Spring Protection
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Ground water – Drilling Rig
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Handpump – Shallow well or Borehole
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Water tankers
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Trucking Bladder Tank
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WatSan ERU - Treatment and Supply module Provide 600,000 ltrs drinking water per day for 40.000 beneficiaries in emergency situations
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WatSan ERU - Distribution and Trucking module Transport and Distribution of drinking water (75.000 ltrs/day) to beneficiaries in remote areas
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WatSan ERU - Specialized Water and Sanitation module Drinking Water (120.000 ltrs per day) and sanitation for health facilities and smaller populations (up to 15.000 )
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WatSan ERU - Mass Sanitation module Basic Sanitation facilities to a population of 40.000 beneficiaries in emergency situations
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WatSan ERU‘s - shipping
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ERU‘s - Oxfam tanks
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ERU‘s - Bladder tanks
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TapStands
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Filtration & Treatment
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Del Aqua water testing kit
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Latrines
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Vector control
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Garbage collection
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Standing water
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Laundry Point
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Hygiene Promotion
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