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PSI
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PSI is a nonprofit organization based in Washington,
D.C. that harnesses the vitality of the private sector to address
the health problems of low-income and vulnerable populations in
more than 60 developing countries. With programs in malaria, reproductive
health, child survival and HIV, PSI promotes products, services
and healthy behavior that enable low-income and vulnerable people
to lead healthier lives. Products and services are sold at subsidized
prices rather than given away in order to motivate commercial sector
involvement.
PSI is the leading nonprofit social marketing organization
in the world.
PSI's Mission
The mission of PSI is to measurably improve the health of poor and
vulnerable people in the developing world, principally through social
marketing of family planning and health products and services, and
health communications. Social marketing engages private sector resources
and uses private sector techniques to encourage healthy behavior
and make markets work for the poor.
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•Safe Water
In 2004, as part of a safe water education program
aimed at reducing sickness and death caused by diarrheal diseases
among children under 5 years of age, PSI/Haiti launched PUR —
an affordable and easy-to-use water treatment product. In 2006,
PSI expanded the portfolio of water treatment products with Dlo
Lavi, a dilute sodium hypochlorite solution that provides an easy-to-use,
low-cost option of treating drinking water.
• Oral Rehydration
PSI launched a nationwide child survival project
in 1999 to promote oral rehydration therapy and to distribute oral
rehydration salts through social marketing under the brand name
Sel Lavi. Sel Lavi treats and prevents dehydration caused by diarrhea,
the leading cause of mortality in Haiti among children 1-11 months
old.
• Nutrition
In 2005, PSI/Haiti launched Babyfer, an iron and
vitamin supplement for children. Babyfer contains iron, Vitamin
C, Folic Acid, Vitamin A, and Zinc and is designed to provide the
recommended daily requirement of micronutrients for children aged
6-24 months. It helps reduces the risk of anemia and development
problems associated with iron deficiency. Babyfer is distributed
through pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical outlets across the
country and supported by behavior change communications.
Safe Water, Diarrheal Disease Control, Child Nutrition
- Every year, lack of safe water and proper sanitation
result in 2 million child deaths and 443 million missed school
days
- HALF of all hospital beds in the developing world
are filled with people sick from waterborne diseases. More people
die of diarrhea from unsafe water and poor sanitation than from
armed conflict.
- Treating drinking water costs less than one penny
per family per day, and could save one million children’s
lives each year.
PSI's Contribution
In 2006, PSI treated over 8.6 billion liters of
drinking water, averting 2.5 million cases of severe diarrhea and
saving the lives of 6,000 children through its safe water programs
alone. In addition, PSI saved the lives of 4,100 children through
its ORS programs (details).PSI currently social markets and distributes
three household water treatment products in twenty-three countries.
PSI’s safe water communication strategies, which include both
commercial marketing and community mobilization, generate awareness
of the link between contaminated water and disease, and hence the
value of disinfecting drinking water. Because fecal contamination
from unwashed hands and foods can also spread disease, PSI’s
communications typically combine household water treatment with
promotion of supportive hygienic behaviors.
Household Water Treatment
While investments in infrastructure are essential to social and
economic development, population growth, migration, war and insufficient
funding make it unfeasible to reach everyone with clean, piped water
in the near future.
This results in more than a billion people worldwide who still
lack consistent access to safe water, and billions more than do
not have safe water piped into their homes.
Most people in developing countries draw their water from a central
source, such as a well, borehole, lake, or river, and therefore
need to transport and store their water. Household water treatment
products such as Safe Water Solution, PUR and chlorine tablets are
complementary to water delivery infrastructure, which may deliver
clean water to communal water points but that cannot keep water
from becoming contaminated during transport and home storage.
Use of home water disinfection can be adopted quickly and inexpensively,
leading to immediate health impact. Household water treatment products
can also be used for treating contaminated and/or turbid water taken
from rivers, streams, swamps or open wells in areas where no infrastructure
exists.
PSI conducts communication campaigns to encourage proper water
treatment, storage and hygiene.
Other Diarrheal Disease Control Interventions
Children often die from dehydration caused by diarrhea. In 1985,
PSI began to social market oral rehydration salts (ORS). ORS is
a small sachet of salt and sugar that is 95% effective in saving
the lives of dehydrated children. ORS rapidly restores lost body
fluids and electrolytes. PSI uses social marketing to teach caretakers
about the importance of giving children with diarrhea increased
fluids such as ORS, and makes ORS readily available.
The use of zinc, along with oral rehydration therapy, is promoted
by UNICEF and the World Health Organization as the best way to decrease
the incidence, severity and recurrence of diarrhea disease. In Cambodia
in 2006, PSI started marketing zinc supplements alongside ORS. Through
the USAID-funded POUZN mechanism, PSI/Nepal in collaboration with
the Nepal Ministry of Heath and Population’s Child Health
Division launched pediatric zinc for the treatment of diarrhea in
young children in the three districts of Kathmandu, Bhaktapur and
Lalitpur in 2007.
Child Nutrition
Billions of children, mostly in developing countries, are disabled
by micronutrient deficiencies. Iron, Vitamin A, and iodine deficiencies
are the most common form of micronutrient malnutrition and of greatest
public health concern worldwide.
Solving micronutrient malnutrition is an important step in protecting
populations and is working to reduce the health and social costs
of micronutrient deficiencies through the social marketing of vitamin
supplements and other products currently in development.
• Sprinkles: Sprinkles flakes are mixed into children’s
porridge or milk to prevent iron deficiency that can lead to impairment
of cognitive growth.
• De-worming: An estimated 300 million people, 50% of them
school-aged children, are severely ill or suffer from micronutrient
deficiencies due to worm infections. A single-dose tablet taken
twice per year is a highly cost-effective intervention
LABEL INGREDIENT LISTING:
Barley Malt, Barley Malt Flour, Ground Barley Meal.
SHELF LIFE:
2 years maximum at 40° - 75° F
6 months at higher temperatures of 80° - 95°
F
Storage should be in a clean, dry area.
PACKAGING:
50 lb. net weight; multiwall paper bags with polyliner.
Special packaging is available in 5 gallon polyethylene pails with
liner, supply of Ziploc Bags & 1/4th teaspoon measuring spoons.
Each 5 gallon container amounts to about 33 to 37 lbs. net weight.
Please note that each lb. of PowerFlour will supplement 650 to 700
cupfuls of porridge.
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