Since
September 2014, I have been managing the Chemists Without Borders team in
Bangladesh. We started with a team of
part time interns, all graduates of the Asian University for Women in
Chittagong, Bangladesh. We had the
objective of seeing whether we could work effectively with high schools to
educate the students, and through them, their families about the health hazards
of arsenic in drinking water.
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Figure 1. Arsenic Education team (from the left): Monira Sultana, Nishat Raihana, Taslima Khanam, Anowara Begum, Shahena Begum. |
We worked
with six high schools and found the students to be very interested in our
message, with high attendance and lots of questions at our presentations. Also, at each school, we had many volunteers
to make measurements of arsenic concentration at wells near the schools. Our team trained the students how to make the
measurements and gave them the test kits.
As a result, we got arsenic concentration measurements at 20 to 30 wells
in the neighborhoods of most of the schools. We found
that two of the schools, Sitakunda High School, and Teriail High School, had
very high arsenic concentrations (150ppb) at the school wells. This was a
surprise result for the students and the teachers at these schools. They didn’t realize that they had been
drinking water contaminated with arsenic.
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Figure 2. Skin effects by drinking arsenic contaminated water. |
A detailed
report on our work during Stage 1 of our project (Sept 2014 through Dec. 2014) can
be found on our Indiegogo site. Since
January 2015, our work in Bangladesh has been led by Anowara Begum and Shahena
Begum, and their priority has been to form partnerships and funding
relationships so that the project can be sustainable on a long term basis. They
have been joined for two months this summer by Adam Cooper, an American student
from Stetson University in Florida.
Accomplishments
so far have been:
1. Several
Bangladesh Rotary Clubs have agreed to fund the replacement of arsenic
contaminated wells at the two high schools discovered in Stage 1 of the
project, and this will bring clean water to 4000 people.
2. HOPE
Foundation for Women and Children of Bangladesh has asked our team to
investigate wells contaminated with organic matter in their region, which has
caused a number of people to become ill.
We will also meet with their director for midwife training to discuss
including our arsenic presentation in their midwife training.
3. Agami, a
Bay Area organization that supports a number of schools in Bangladesh, has
asked us to meet with their team in Dhaka and with teachers at schools in the
Chittagong region to discuss our providing an extended course on health
education to students in their schools.
4. A
prominent newspaper in Bangladesh, Prothom Alo, has published an article on our
work in the local language, Bangla.
5. On August
2, our American student, Adam, will be interviewed on a Bangladesh national TV
program about Chemists Without Borders and our work in education and health
improvement in Bangladesh.
I’d like to
invite anyone who has our interest in our work or who might like to support it
by volunteering or making a financial contribution to contact me at:
Blogger:
Ray Kronquist
@RayKronquist
ray@kronquist.com