Design Observer

Archive
Books + Store
Job Board
Comments
About
Contact



Change Observer

Resources
Submissions
About
Contact


Departments

Audio
Collections
Dialogues
Essays
Gallery
Interviews
Miscellaneous
Opinions
Primary Sources
Program-Aspen
Program-Bellagio
Projects
Report
Reviews


Topics

Advertising
Aid
Architecture
Art
Books
Branding
Business
Cities / Places
Community
Culture
Design History
Design Practice
Development
Disaster Relief
Ecology
Economy
Education
Energy
Environment
Fashion
Film / Video
Food/Agriculture
Geography
Global / Local
Graphic Design
Health / Safety
Ideas
Illustration
Info Design
Infrastructure
Interaction Design
Journalism
Landscape
Media
Motion Design
Museums
Nature
Obituary
Philanthropy
Photography
Planning
Politics / Policy
Popular Culture
Poverty
Preservation
Product Design
Public Art
Science
Shelter
Social Enterprise
Sports
Sustainability
Technology
Theory/Criticism
Transportation
Typography
Urbanism
Water


Comments (2) Posted 07.18.09 | PERMALINK | PRINT

Project

Camel Mobile Clinic


A system for transporting medicine to remote African communities blends affordable technologies with advanced engineering and design.

By Ernest Beck


Bamboo saddle designed to hold refrigerated unit for preserving medicine.
Photo courtesy Designmatters, Art Center College of Design


The Laikipia and Samburu districts in Kenya are isolated regions populated largely by nomadic peoples. The terrain is harsh and inhospitable, with few roadways, making travel difficult from urban centers. The local population, of around 500,000, suffers from high rates of illiteracy and poor health care. For the past decade, the Kenyan-based Nomadic Communities Trust (NCT) has sent camel convoys — the most efficient and cost-effective means of transportation — to the region with medical supplies. But poor equipment (basically, wooden boxes tied to the camels with abrasive sisal rope) and lack of refrigeration meant that basic medicines such as vaccines could not be made available.

In 2005, the NCT partnered with Designmatters at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, and Princeton University’s Institute of Science and Technology of Materials (PRISM), a multidisciplinary research center in the general field of materials, on several prototypes for methods to preserve and transport medical supplies. A multifunctional system was developed made from bamboo to provide a lightweight, durable ergonomic saddle along with a saddleback structure that holds a compartmented refrigerated unit and solar power generator. The saddles improve the efficiency of the loads carried over rugged terrain. The crystalline solar panels can also be deployed by the mobile clinics for lighting and refrigeration in the field.


Solar-powered refrigerator to be fitted into saddle.
Photo courtesy Designmatters, Art Center College of Design


The project, which could be fully implemented in 2010 if necessary funding is secured, blends relatively affordable technologies with advanced engineering and design. It was devised with a budget of a few thousand dollars and staff from Art Center and Princeton, which was critical because the project was not selected to receive assistance from the World Bank. “We created this project without having to send a team of 20 people back and forth to Kenya for field research,” notes Mariana Amatullo, executive director of Designmatters. To be resourceful, Amatullo and her associates asked the Bronx Zoo to make its camels available to test the saddle, a process that offered vital information without requiring the animals to walk long distances with heavy loads.

Designmatters also engaged Art Center illustration students to develop health education materials addressing issues including family planning and preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS. Because communication in the region is mostly carried out by story tellers, and the topics are sensitive, the students devised a pictorial sequence of stories — often with animal metaphors — that were culturally appropriate and easily understandable by nonliterate communities. The canvas material chosen for the pictorial presentation stands up to harsh weather conditions and can be easily rolled and carried by health counselors.

Amatullo says the project shows the value of collaboration between designers, engineers and development people, and how together they can be incubators for innovation. “We are looking at high-tech work with solar energy blended with low-tech materials like bamboo, and local knowledge, to produce something that is repairable and scalable and has applications far beyond Kenya,” she says. Currently, the saddle-packaging system is being tested in Kenya as well as in Ethiopia, but Amatullo believes it provides a model for any underserved, remote area where camels are found. In Laikipia and Samburu alone, there are an estimated 300,000 occupants who have not yet been reached by mobile health clinics. This project, she adds, “has the potential to change the long-term health and well-being of isolated communities.”








Comments (2)   |   JUMP TO MOST RECENT COMMENT >>

And you might be interested to check out more social innovation via camel cart from India.
Meena Kadri
07.31.09 at 04:59

This looks amazing. I think that it's wonderful that people exist that are so clever and imaginative to produce solar products like this. It's all about being practical and caring too.
Dan
01.14.10 at 09:54


Design Observer encourages comments to be short and to the point; as a general rule, they should not run longer than the original post. Comments should show a courteous regard for the presence of other voices in the discussion. We reserve the right to edit or delete comments that do not adhere to this standard.
Read Complete Comments Policy >>


Name             

Email address 




Please type the text shown in the graphic.


|
Share This Story

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ernest Beck is a New York-based freelance writer and editor.
More Bio >>

ADS VIA THE DECK


DESIGN OBSERVER JOBS




RELATED POSTS


Camel Mobile Clinic Update
Update on Art Center's Design Matters program, which prototypes a system for transporting medicine on camel back to remote communities in Kenya. Originally published July 18, 2009.

Permanent Error
Photo by Pieter Hugo of Ghana's Agbogbloshie slum.

D-Rev Blue Star Jaundice Treatment
Report on Blue Star, D-Rev's affordable jaundice treatment for newborn babies in the developing world.

Es Tiempo
Report on Es Tiempo, a campaign designed to encourage Hispanic women in Southern California to seek annual screenings for cervical cancer.

Aspen Design Summit: Update 05.11.10
Dateline Aspen. An on-going report on progress on the six projects developed at the Aspen Design Summit in November 2009.

The Road to Wellville
Recommendations for designing a healthcare system around our nation's health needs — chronic care management, prevention and acute care treatment — not history, doctors and their profitability.

EyeWriter
Report on the EyeWriter software system, which allows a graffiti artist suffering from ALS to continue working merely by moving his eyes.

Aspen Design Summit Report: UNICEF Menstruation Challenge
At the Aspen Design Summit November 11–14, 2009, sponsored by AIGA and Winterhouse Institute, the UNICEF Menstruation Challenge Project proposed an “eco-system” whereby sanitary pads became a linchpin for local economic growth, for educational programs about health and hygiene and for research into materials that could be adapted to other countries.

Aspen Design Summit Report: Sustainable Food and Childhood Obesity
At the Aspen Design Summit November 11–14, 2009, sponsored by AIGA and Winterhouse Institute, the Sustainable Food Project focused on accelerating the shift from a global, abstract food system to a regional, real food system via a robust portfolio of activities — including a grand challenge and a series of youth-engagement programs.

Aspen Design Summit Report: CDC and Healthy Aging
At the Aspen Design Summit November 11–14, 2009, sponsored by AIGA and Winterhouse Institute, the CDC Healthy Aging Project began with the initial premise to enhance the ability of public health entities to determine whether adults 50 and over have received recommended preventive health services. The Project developed a “5 over 50” concept and brand name, and a new goal: to double the current number of people who are “up to date” with these preventive measures.

Kick4Life
AIDS education mixes with soccer in plans for a new Lesotho stadium.

Renewal
Aid worker Lindsay Stark's portrait of the ritual purification of a child soldier in Sierra Leone.

Emergency Response Studio
Report on artist Paul Villinski's mobile studio, which he converted from a trailer of the type used by FEMA to house victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Freeplay Fetal Heart Rate Monitor
Report on the Freeplay fetal heart rate monitor, which won the 2009 INDEX award in the Body category.

Peepoobag
Report on Peepoobag, a new self-sanitizing, single-use, biodegradable container for human waste.

Chulha Stove
Report on the Chulha stove designed by Philips to reduce indoor air pollution in developing countries.

Paradise Fouled
Review of Crude, Joe Berlinger's documentary film about a lawsuit filed against Chevron by denizens of the Ecuadorean Amazon.

A Thousand Points on Light: Part II
Continuation of debate between lighting designer Leni Schwendinger and Dark-Sky advocate Susan Harder about proper illumination of urban, suburban and rural environments.

A Thousand Points on Light: Part I
Debate between lighting designer Leni Schwendinger and Dark-Sky advocate Susan Harder about proper illumination of urban, suburban and rural environments.