Road accidents are the single largest cause of death amongst young people around the world. But a project in Kenya is making impressive progress in tackling the issue. It has deployed a small and very simple weapon, which has been proven to cut bus accidents by at least a quarter – a sticker. Also on the programme, how they’re making recreation space in Chile, but without knocking down any buildings. Presenter: Tom Colls
Producer: Harriet Noble [Image: Mutatu buses in Kenya. Copyright: Getty Images]
NachrichtenGesundheit, Wellness & Beauty
People Fixing the World Folgen
Brilliant solutions to the world’s problems. We meet people with ideas to make the world a better place and investigate whether they work.
Folgen von People Fixing the World
467 Folgen
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Folge vom 30.05.2017The Stickers that Save Lives
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Folge vom 23.05.2017Turning Plastic Trash into CashPicking up money - that’s what Haitian’s nicknamed a movement seeking to solve Haiti’s plastic waste problem and reduce poverty at the same time. It was started by a man who saw a glimmer of hope in the devastation wrought by the 2010 earthquake: plastic bottles were clogging the beaches and filling the oceans with rubbish. But what if you could clear up the trash, give Haitians employment, and reduce the reliance on “virgin” plastic, all at the same time? It’s a bold idea that aims to solve two of the World’s big problems – poverty and plastic in the ocean. And it all hinges on attaching social value to recycled plastic. So why aren’t more companies doing it?Presenter: Sahar Zand Reporter: Gemma Newby(Image: Plastic rubbish on beach in Haiti, Credit: BBC)
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Folge vom 16.05.2017Turning Goats into WaterFariel Salahuddin is not the type of person you’d expect to see wandering around rural Pakistan, especially with a herd of goats. She’s a successful energy consultant who has worked around the world. But when she returned to where she grew up, Pakistan, Fariel decided she wanted to work on smaller projects to try to make an immediate impact and provide solar energy to poor, rural communities. This was all very well, until she realised these places didn’t have water, let alone power. What they did have was goats. Fariel developed an innovative scheme to trade what the villagers have in plentiful supply for something they desperately needed: goats for water. But what was Fariel going to do with all her newly acquired goats? Presenter: Mukul Devichand Reporters: Secunder Kermani and Dougal Shaw Producer: Charlotte PritchardImage: Goats in rural Pakistan / Credit: BBC
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Folge vom 09.05.2017Saving Lives with Text MessagesWhat do you do in a medical emergency when the equivalent of 999 or 911 simply doesn’t exist? After spending time in countries that lack public ambulance services, US paramedic Jason Friesen realised the problem wasn’t a lack of sophisticated ambulances, or the hi-tech medical equipment inside them, but the communication system necessary to get an injured person from A to B in time to save their life. In the Dominican Republic there are no public ambulances but now, in two rural areas, first responders respond to a medical emergency as fast as any ambulance service in the developed world. And all it takes is one smartphone, a handful of willing volunteers, and an Uber-like text system that crowdsources help when disaster strikes.And Dougal Shaw meets the man who is pioneering a way to use recycled plastic to make stronger, longer lasting roads.Presenter: Sahar Zand Reporters: Gemma Newby, Dougal Shaw.Image: First responders in the back of an ambulance / Credit: BBC