By Derek Markham:
In the developed world, we take modern healthcare and all of the technology that supports it for granted, including the most basic of services, such as power and light. But, in the developing world, mothers and new-borns can die during childbirth for lack of those simple services, even with the most skilled midwives or doctors attending them. In some areas, midwives have to resort to using candles, kerosene lanterns, or even the light from their cellphones, in order to illuminate the birthing room or medical clinic, which is far from optimal when dealing with issues of life and death. Thanks to the work of Dr. Laura Stachel and her husband Hal Aronson, there is a simple and effective solution to reducing maternal and infant mortality in childbirth, and it all fits inside a suitcase that can go wherever it’s needed. “Dr. Laura Stachel went to Northern Nigeria in 2008 to study ways to lower maternal mortality in state hospitals. She witnessed deplorable conditions in state facilities including sporadic electricity that impaired maternity and surgical care. Without a reliable source of electricity, night-time deliveries were attended in near darkness, caesarean sections were cancelled or conducted by flashlight, and critically ill patients waited hours or days for life-saving procedures. The outcomes were often tragic.” – WE CARE Solar
Stachel and Aronson co-founded a non-profit, WE CARE Solar, in order to improve maternal and infant health outcomes in areas of the world without access to reliable electricity, and took on the challenge of developing a viable solution. Stachel’s husband, a solar energy educator, built a prototype of a portable solar electric system designed specifically for maternity wards, labour rooms, operating rooms, and labs. This portable solar power system fit into a suitcase-sized enclosure, and when Stachel brought it with her to a Nigerian hospital, to be used to charge LED lights, headlamps, and walkie-talkies, the healthcare workers immediately saw the importance of having such a system, especially in outlying medical clinics.
From that prototype grew the current iteration of their portable solar electric system, which fits into a rugged suitcase, and is dubbed the Solar Suitcase. Since then, WE CARE Solar has produced about 300 of the Solar Suitcases and distributed them to 25 countries in order to help reduce maternal and infant mortality there. In addition, while the purpose was initially to support healthy outcomes in childbirth, the Solar Suitcase easily lends itself to the other needs of medical clinics, as it can provide highly efficient lighting, as well as power for mobile communication, laptops and other small medical devices.
“The system includes high-efficiency LED medical task lighting, a universal cell phone charger, a battery charger for AAA or AA batteries, and outlets for 12V DC devices. The basic system comes with 40 or 80 watts of solar panels, and a 14 amp-hour sealed lead-acid battery. The maternity kit comes with a foetal Doppler.” – WE CARE Solar
WE CARE Solar is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization, and needs donations to fund their current projects, which include supplying Solar Suitcases in the Philippines, Nepal, and Tanzania. Each Solar Suitcase (with accessories) costs $1,500, a foetal Doppler device costs an additional $100, and shipment to Africa or Asia costs about $200, so if you want to support this important health initiative that reduces maternal and infant mortality in developing countries, please consider making a donation.
Source: http://ecopreneurist.com/
Portable Solar Power Suitcase Reduces Maternal and Infant Mortality
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