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Community health We run various projects in some of the communities where we operate, often in partnership with local NGOs or development bodies, to improve access to healthcare for local people and to reduce the spread of diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria. Write something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. No Archives Categories.
Today, millions of people across the world are unable to access medical treatment. In some communities where we work, access to healthcare may be limited or inadequate. For example, parts of Iraq have an acute shortage of doctors and other medical staff due to ongoing local conflicts and war. To help address these challenges, Shell runs various projects that provide access to adequate healthcare to communities, often in partnership with local non-governmental organisations or development bodies. We also have health facilities that are available to employees, contractors and, where possible, to local people. In the Niger Delta, for example, the Obio Cottage Hospital in Port Harcourt has become one of the most visited health facilities in the region.
It was set up by Shell Petroleum Development Corporation (SPDC) in 2010 and offers a community health insurance scheme. In Iraq, we partner with the AMAR International Charitable Foundation (Amar Icf), a charity that helps communities in the Middle East to rebuild their lives after conflict.
Together, we train women from local communities to provide vital health services to thousands of people every month, supporting health education in schools as well as providing access to clean water. Improving access to clean water India’s growing population means many of its natural resources are being stretched. This includes water. There are supplies across parts of the country that are contaminated by sewage or agricultural run-off. This can lead to chronic diarrhea and gastroenteritis. Now a community-run project in one village in Western India is helping to make a difference.
It is supported by Shell’s Hazira joint venture, which operates a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal and plant nearby. Working with the community, Hazira LNG’s social performance team helped to install a reverse osmosis drinking water plant. Villagers pay in advance to fill their water bottles each day.
Doctors report that visits from patients with water-related illnesses are now less frequent. More people are enjoying access to affordable, clean drinking water. Watch this film to find out more. Title: Improving Access to Clean Water - Hazira LNG Duration: 3:26 minutes Description: Meeting the challenge of the contamination of India’s water to supply clean drinking water through an innovative community project supported by Hazira LNG – a reverse osmosis drinking water plant. Improving Access to Clean Water - Hazira LNG Transcript [Background music plays] Instrumental music with an Indian flavour, at times with light and delicate notes, at times more rhythmic and dramatic.
[Narrator] With India’s population over the 1.3 billion mark, many of the country’s natural resources are being stretched, including water, with many sources contaminated from sewage and agricultural run-off. [Video footage] Footage of bustling streets in India, The Red Fort in the background and pedestrians, cabs, buses and other vehicles filling the streets. Windows 2000 sp1 download. Low angle view of the Indian flag flying from The Red Fort. Bird’s eye view of bustling city streets, multi-storey buildings lining the streets. High angle vertically panning footage of a river.
Tall buildings along the banks and blue sky above form the background. Footage of the soil along the banks of the river. The soil has a greenish tinge.
Aerial footage showing the greenish tinge along the banks of the river. Interview with Dr. Manohar Ghemawat [Title] Village Doctor / Gujarat, India [Text displays] Dr. Manohar Ghemawat / Village Doctor / Gujarat, India [Dr. Ghemawat] Because of the poor sanitation, gastroenteritis was very common when the people are using contaminated water or well water.
[Video footage] Mid-shot of Dr Ghemawat speaking to the interviewer who is out of shot, against the background of his surgery. Footage of a villagers collecting water in canisters or drinking water from a communal water spout under a tree. Interview with Ila Ben Patel [Title] Resident / Hazira, India [Text displays] Ila Ben Patel / Resident / Hazira, India [Ila – subtitles] When we drank the other water we frequently fell sick, so every month or two we had to go the hospital. [Video footage] Low angle footage of a woman entering the doctor’s surgery. Footage of the woman and the doctor conversing across his desk.
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