Project Status



Project Type:  Borehole Well and Hand Pump

Regional Program: Port Loko, Sierra Leone WaSH Program

Project Phase:  Reserved
Estimated Install Date (?):  2025

Project Features


Click icons to learn about each feature.



The 14 Pepel Community Health Center staff care for an average of 40 patients a day, which is incredibly challenging as they have limited space, no overhead lighting, and experience daily water scarcity.

The Pepel Community Health Center.

The well at the center experiences frequent breakdowns that are expensive and difficult to repair. When the well does not offer water, the only option is to travel to another well in a neighboring community. Nurses often travel more than thirty minutes to collect water, stealing time from patients needing care.

Traveling for water.

Field Officer Alie Kamara shared, "This facility has [a] U-5 unit for treating children, [an] EPI unit to store vaccines, Labor and Delivery for caring [for] pregnant women and general cases. This facility serves people in the environs and has a catchment population of 8,750. They have a freezer powered by solar, which was used to store vaccines. They use different vaccines like BCG, Polio, Malaria, OPV, Rota, Penta, measles, etc."

Maternity Ward.

"Moreover, this facility faces challenges like electricity, not enough buildings, water access, [and] latrines. Presently, there is no light system in the facility, and they find it difficult to see cases, especially when pregnant women come into the facility for labor; in most cases, they see deliveries at night. Water access in this facility [is] another challenge; their present well has been down for years, and they tried to repair it but could not," Alie continued.

The broken-down well is in need of rehabilitation.

The Pepel Community Health Center has to work twice as hard to give their patients the quality of care they deserve.

36-year-old nurse Isatu Conteh works through this challenge every day. So much of her time is consumed by water collection that she couldn't quantify it when asked.

Nurse Isatu Conteh.

"I cannot tell the exact time I used to reach the water source, especially the well that [is] located far away from the health facility. Sometimes, when the well that is close to us gets locked, I prefer walking long distances to access another water well, which takes time before I [can] return. Due to the distance, it takes me so long to reach the well and return [to] the health facility."

Isatu Conteh at the distant well.

"Water plays a role in my daily life. My profession as a nurse cannot be performed effectively without water. So, water is needed for me to be able to do deliveries [for] pregnant women. The well we fetch water from is not always open to us. It is a community well and they get ownership of that well. So, it [is] difficult for us to fetch water from it mostly at the times [when] we need it, especially labor cases at night. All this makes us not fetch enough water, especially when the well gets overcrowded," Isatu shared.

Patient room.

Without water, true healthcare can't be accomplished. The dedicated doctors and nurses need a different solution. They need access to reliable water. Rehabilitating the well at the Pepel Community Health Center will give Isata the tools she needs to provide the excellent patient care she can.

Steps Toward a Solution

Our technical experts worked with the local community to identify the most effective solution to their water crisis. They decided to drill a borehole well, construct a platform for the well, and attach a hand pump.

Well
Abundant water often lies just beneath our feet. Aquifers—natural underground rivers—flow through layers of sediment and rock, offering a constant supply of safe water. A borehole well is drilled deep into the earth to access this naturally filtered and protected water. We penetrate meters, sometimes even hundreds of meters, of soil, silt, rock, and more to reach the water underground. Once found, we construct a platform for the well and attach a hand pump. The community gains a safe, enclosed water source capable of providing approximately five gallons of water per minute. Learn more here!

Community Education & Ownership
Hygiene and sanitation training are integral to our water projects. Training is tailored to each community's specific needs and includes key topics such as proper water handling, improved hygiene practices, disease transmission prevention, and care of the new water point. Safe water and improved hygiene habits foster a healthier future for everyone in the community. Encouraged and supported by the guidance of our team, a water user committee representative of the community's diverse members assumes responsibility for maintaining the water point, often gathering fees to ensure its upkeep.

We're just getting started, check back soon!


Project Photos


Project Type

Abundant water is often right under our feet! Beneath the Earth’s surface, rivers called aquifers flow through layers of sediment and rock, providing a constant supply of safe water. For borehole wells, we drill deep into the earth, allowing us to access this water which is naturally filtered and protected from sources of contamination at the surface level. First, we decide where to drill by surveying the area and determining where aquifers are likely to sit. To reach the underground water, our drill rigs plunge through meters (sometimes even hundreds of meters!) of soil, silt, rock, and more. Once the drill finds water, we build a well platform and attach a hand pump. If all goes as planned, the community is left with a safe, closed water source providing around five gallons of water per minute! Learn more here!


Contributors

1 individual donor(s)