WATER PURIFIER LIFESTRAW PERSONAL
Harga : Rp 450.000
The LifeStraw® Concept
The Millennium Development Goals ( MDGs) call for a reduction of the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water by half between 1990 and 2015. Yet, an estimated 884 million people in the world, 37% of whom live in Sub-Saharan Africa, still use unimproved sources of drinking water1.
Image of child drinking water from bowl through LifeStrawLack of access to safe drinking water contributes to the staggering burden of diarrhoeal diseases worldwide, particularly affecting the young, the immunocompromised and the poor. Nearly one in five child deaths – about 1.5 million each year – is due to diarrhoea. Diarrhoea kills more young children than AIDS, malaria and measles combined2. Drinking contaminated water also leads to reduced personal productive time, with widespread economic effects.
Approximately 43% of the global population, especially the lower-income populace in the remote and rural parts of the developing world, is deprived of household safe piped water. Thus, there is a pressing need for effective and affordable options for obtaining safe drinking water at home. Point-of-use ( POU) treatment is an alternative approach, which can accelerate the health gains associated with the provision of safe drinking water to the at-risk populations. It empowers people to control the quality of their drinking water. Treating water at the household level or other point of use also reduces the risk of waterborne disease arising from recontamination during collection, transport, and use in the home, a well-known cause of water-quality degradation3. In many rural and urban areas of the developing world, household water-quality interventions can reduce diarrhoea morbidity by more than 40% 4, 5. Treating water in the home offers the opportunity for significant health gains at potentially dramatic cost savings over conventional improvements in water supplies, such as piped water connections to households6.
Water filters have been shown to be the most effective interventions amongst all point-of-use water treatment methods for reducing diarrhoeal diseases7. The Cochrane review demonstrates that it is not enough to treat water at the point-of-source; it must also be made safe at the point-of-consumption.
LifeStraw® and LifeStraw® Family are both point-of-use water interventions – truly unique offerings from Vestergaard Frandsen that address the concern for affordably obtaining safe drinking water at home and outside. These complementary safe water tools have the potential to accelerate progress towards the MDG target of providing access to safe drinking water, which would yield health and economic benefits; thus contributing to the achievement of other MDGs like poverty reduction, childhood survival, school attendance, gender equality and environment sustainability.
LifeStraw Personal
Fiturnya:
Spesifikasi :
1. WHO and UNICEF. 2008. Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation
2. UNICEF and WHO. 2009. Diarrhoea: Why children are still dying and what can be done
3. Wright, J. et al. 2003. Household drinking water in developing countries: a systematic review of microbiological contamination between source and point-of-use. Trop Med Int Health 9: 106 – 117
4. Ghislaine, R and Clasen, T. 2010. Estimating the Scope of Household Water Treatment in Low- and Medium-Income Countries. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 82( 2) , pp. 289– 300
5. Fewtrell, L. et al. 2005. Water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions to reduce diarrhea in less developed countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet Infectious Diseases ( 5) : 42– 52
6. International Finance Corporation ( World Bank Group) . Safe Water for All: Harnessing the Private Sector to Reach the Underserved
7. Clasen, T. et al. 2006. Interventions to improve water quality for preventing diarrhoea ( Review) . The Cochrane Collaboration.
The Millennium Development Goals ( MDGs) call for a reduction of the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water by half between 1990 and 2015. Yet, an estimated 884 million people in the world, 37% of whom live in Sub-Saharan Africa, still use unimproved sources of drinking water1.
Image of child drinking water from bowl through LifeStrawLack of access to safe drinking water contributes to the staggering burden of diarrhoeal diseases worldwide, particularly affecting the young, the immunocompromised and the poor. Nearly one in five child deaths – about 1.5 million each year – is due to diarrhoea. Diarrhoea kills more young children than AIDS, malaria and measles combined2. Drinking contaminated water also leads to reduced personal productive time, with widespread economic effects.
Approximately 43% of the global population, especially the lower-income populace in the remote and rural parts of the developing world, is deprived of household safe piped water. Thus, there is a pressing need for effective and affordable options for obtaining safe drinking water at home. Point-of-use ( POU) treatment is an alternative approach, which can accelerate the health gains associated with the provision of safe drinking water to the at-risk populations. It empowers people to control the quality of their drinking water. Treating water at the household level or other point of use also reduces the risk of waterborne disease arising from recontamination during collection, transport, and use in the home, a well-known cause of water-quality degradation3. In many rural and urban areas of the developing world, household water-quality interventions can reduce diarrhoea morbidity by more than 40% 4, 5. Treating water in the home offers the opportunity for significant health gains at potentially dramatic cost savings over conventional improvements in water supplies, such as piped water connections to households6.
Water filters have been shown to be the most effective interventions amongst all point-of-use water treatment methods for reducing diarrhoeal diseases7. The Cochrane review demonstrates that it is not enough to treat water at the point-of-source; it must also be made safe at the point-of-consumption.
LifeStraw® and LifeStraw® Family are both point-of-use water interventions – truly unique offerings from Vestergaard Frandsen that address the concern for affordably obtaining safe drinking water at home and outside. These complementary safe water tools have the potential to accelerate progress towards the MDG target of providing access to safe drinking water, which would yield health and economic benefits; thus contributing to the achievement of other MDGs like poverty reduction, childhood survival, school attendance, gender equality and environment sustainability.
LifeStraw Personal
Fiturnya:
- Menawarkan akses mudah ke air minum yang aman jauh dari rumah.
- Filter minimum 700 liter air.
- Membunuh dan menghilangkan 99,999% dari bakteri ditularkan melalui air.
- Membunuh dan menghilangkan 99% dari virus ditularkan melalui air
- Menghilangkan partikel turun ke 15 mikron.
- Tidak memerlukan daya listrik atau suku cadang untuk waktu hidup jerami.
- Mudah untuk mendistribusikan massal di daerah di mana air minum terkontaminasi.
Spesifikasi :
- LifeStraw Nama Pribadi
- Deskripsi Portabel pemurni air
- Komposisi luar shell terbuat dari polistiren dampak tinggi
- String untuk menggantung di sekitar leher
- Bahan aktif terhalogenasi mengelusi resin halogen aktif ke dalam air influen untuk inaktivasi bakteri
- Dasar resin anion tukar yang kuat adsorbsi residu halogen bermuatan negatif
- Karbon aktif granular (perak-diresapi) adsorbsi halogen aktif sisa
- Efektif terhadap bakteri dan virus yang ditularkan melalui air Efikasi
- Keamanan tingkat perak Sisa: di bawah Nilai acuan dari WHO dan US EPA dari 100 ppb MCL
- Sisa yodium tingkat: tidak ada / dalam batas WHO
- Kapasitas 700 liter atau 1 tahun Minimum * (* dihitung kira-kira pada konsumsi 2 liter air / hari)
- Filter 2 tahap filtrasi filter partikel partikel dari 125 mikron ke minimal 15 mikron.
- Ukuran 31 cm, 2,9 cm diameter.
- Berat 140 gram (kering)
- 160 gram (basah)
- Shelf Hidup 3 tahun bila disimpan di tempat teduh dan terkena maksimum 30 C
1. WHO and UNICEF. 2008. Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation
2. UNICEF and WHO. 2009. Diarrhoea: Why children are still dying and what can be done
3. Wright, J. et al. 2003. Household drinking water in developing countries: a systematic review of microbiological contamination between source and point-of-use. Trop Med Int Health 9: 106 – 117
4. Ghislaine, R and Clasen, T. 2010. Estimating the Scope of Household Water Treatment in Low- and Medium-Income Countries. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 82( 2) , pp. 289– 300
5. Fewtrell, L. et al. 2005. Water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions to reduce diarrhea in less developed countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet Infectious Diseases ( 5) : 42– 52
6. International Finance Corporation ( World Bank Group) . Safe Water for All: Harnessing the Private Sector to Reach the Underserved
7. Clasen, T. et al. 2006. Interventions to improve water quality for preventing diarrhoea ( Review) . The Cochrane Collaboration.
Free Ongkir wilayah Jakarta & Tangerang dan sekitarnya
Melayani pemesanan untuk dalam dan luar kota
Untuk informasi dan pemesanan hubungi :
KARYA NUSATAMA
Contact Person: Yoga Sutama
Tlp : 02149722589
Esia Mobile :: 02193096961
Mobile : 085880111657
Email : yogakarya1@yahoo.co.id
Gmail : yogakarya3@gmail.com
YM : yogakarya2
Website : http://www.karyanusatama.com
Link : http://karyanusatamagroup.indonetwork.co.id
Melayani pemesanan untuk dalam dan luar kota
Untuk informasi dan pemesanan hubungi :
KARYA NUSATAMA
Contact Person: Yoga Sutama
Tlp : 02149722589
Esia Mobile :: 02193096961
Mobile : 085880111657
Email : yogakarya1@yahoo.co.id
Gmail : yogakarya3@gmail.com
YM : yogakarya2
Website : http://www.karyanusatama.com
Link : http://karyanusatamagroup.indonetwork.co.id

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