1 / 12

Malawi

Malawi. Project Objection. Théo Croutelle, Migo Fernan, Charlotte Monroe, Hugo Thomé. Map of Malawi. Basic informations about malawi. Located in Africa One of the 10 poorest countries Population is around 15 million 70 % of the population is rural

shiri
Télécharger la présentation

Malawi

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Malawi Project Objection Théo Croutelle, Migo Fernan, Charlotte Monroe, Hugo Thomé

  2. Map of Malawi

  3. Basic informations about malawi • Located in Africa • One of the 10 poorest countries • Population is around 15 million • 70 % of the population is rural • High infant mortality and low life expectancy

  4. issues • 65% of the people in Malawi are poor and 28% are ultra-poor. • Agriculture is nearly impossible because of the natural disaster, the landscape of Malawi and the inability to use technology as a solution. • HIV/AIDS is one of the biggest problems in Malawi nearly 1 million Malawians are infected. • Life expectancy is 43 years. • Education is a major problem. The illiteracy rate is over 60% and there aren’t enough schools.

  5. Map of Malawi Malawien flag

  6. Project A-HealthCare • Government could offer free and mandatory blood inspection for the population, this could locate people carrying HIV/AIDS virus and also prevent the virus from spreading. • Free clinics for children could be set up, this would lower the high infant mortality and catch diseases in an early age and prevent it from worsening. • Hospitals could travel to remote areas to give medical treatment, this would give people who live outside the big cities their only medical treatment.

  7. Project B-Contraception • In 1992, Malawi’s Demographic and Health (DHS) Survey had confirmed that the country faced a severe shortage of family planning services. And while fertility fell from 7.6 to 6.7 between 1984 and 1992, Malawi still had one of the highest total fertility rates in sub-Sahara Africa— a serious barrier to government efforts to reduce poverty. • Contraception would also prevent the population from HIV/AIDS • The government’s approach could be composed of these four points: • (a)Community-based distribution of contraceptives • (b)Information, education and communication • (c) Strengthening the back-up support system (skilled health workers and clinics) to support the CBD (community-based distribution) agents • (d) Training CBD agents and family planning service providers to expand the choice of family planning methods.

  8. Malawien families

  9. Project C-Education • Provision of books (school materials) • Expansion of primary school teachers facilities • Banda regime had a bad influence on education (1rst president of Malawi) *latest data as of March 2009 from UNESCO Institute for Statistics. • According to the 2003 education statistics, there were 5055 primary schools, 103 conventional secondary schools, 636 community day secondary schools, 246 private secondary schools, 6 TTCs, 4 technical colleges and two universities (including the new Mzuzu University) in the country. • If women went to school (get educated) they could think about having children, making their own decision, and perhaps could work.

  10. Project D- CREATION OF BANKS AS AN ECONOMIC SOLUTION • Create a donation organization in other countries which will help financiering banks in Malawi. • The creation of banks will lead to a creation of jobs which will introduce money in some families. This money will be used for health care, food, school… • People will be able to borrow from the banks to invest. They will have to pay back but with a very low interest and they will be able to borrow on a very long period. The population will be able to borrow with other people which could facilitate paying back to the bank. • The creation of those banks could create an economic cycle and introduce money in the population which hopefully will resolve most of the economic problem in Malawi.

More Related