Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources

Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) remain the populations' first point of contact when seeking medical help. Women and children, whose health status decides the fate of the country, are the predominant users of primary healthcare centres which means they (the PHCs') must function as high qu...

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Main Author: Ani Vincent Anayochukwu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2021-01-01
Series:Renewable Energy and Environmental Sustainability
Online Access:https://www.rees-journal.org/articles/rees/full_html/2021/01/rees200006/rees200006.html
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spelling doaj-d7d719f29c8c4fbeb0acbe350274b1a52021-08-11T12:33:24ZengEDP SciencesRenewable Energy and Environmental Sustainability2493-94392021-01-016710.1051/rees/2020009rees200006Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sourcesAni Vincent Anayochukwu0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5851-2162Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Hebrew University of Jerusalem – Hadassah Ein Kerem, P.O. Box 12272Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) remain the populations' first point of contact when seeking medical help. Women and children, whose health status decides the fate of the country, are the predominant users of primary healthcare centres which means they (the PHCs') must function as high quality health providers. Karshi Primary Healthcare Centre (KPHC) is one of the health facility that need reliable electricity to improve their healthcare delivery. Due to unreliable power supply, they rely on a diesel powered solution as a primary source of power supply. This negatively impacts patients and the environment, and has been a burden on their operational budgets. Change in energy system is the solution to this unreliable, costly, and unsecure power supply in Karshi, and its objective is to improve and enhance the quality of healthcare delivery services. The assumption is that with better energy source, there will be better healthcare services. A solar powered system with battery storage was proposed as the solution and the simulation results demonstrate that except for the initial cost of investment, the solar PV generator performs better than the diesel generator, in terms of the life cycle costs and the cost per unit energy. The life cycle cost and the cost of energy show a decrease of 75% each. The environmental analysis implies that the solar PV energy system has the potential to avoid the 9371 kg of carbon dioxide if the system is implemented in the future at KPHC. The proposed powered system will supply electricity for the laboratory equipment (centrifuges, microscopes, blood chemical analyzer, hematology analyzer, CD4 machine), vaccine-refrigeration, general purpose refrigerator, computer and telecommunications, while being able to cater to a greater number of patients than in the past.https://www.rees-journal.org/articles/rees/full_html/2021/01/rees200006/rees200006.html
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ani Vincent Anayochukwu
spellingShingle Ani Vincent Anayochukwu
Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
Renewable Energy and Environmental Sustainability
author_facet Ani Vincent Anayochukwu
author_sort Ani Vincent Anayochukwu
title Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
title_short Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
title_full Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
title_fullStr Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
title_full_unstemmed Powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
title_sort powering primary healthcare centres with clean energy sources
publisher EDP Sciences
series Renewable Energy and Environmental Sustainability
issn 2493-9439
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) remain the populations' first point of contact when seeking medical help. Women and children, whose health status decides the fate of the country, are the predominant users of primary healthcare centres which means they (the PHCs') must function as high quality health providers. Karshi Primary Healthcare Centre (KPHC) is one of the health facility that need reliable electricity to improve their healthcare delivery. Due to unreliable power supply, they rely on a diesel powered solution as a primary source of power supply. This negatively impacts patients and the environment, and has been a burden on their operational budgets. Change in energy system is the solution to this unreliable, costly, and unsecure power supply in Karshi, and its objective is to improve and enhance the quality of healthcare delivery services. The assumption is that with better energy source, there will be better healthcare services. A solar powered system with battery storage was proposed as the solution and the simulation results demonstrate that except for the initial cost of investment, the solar PV generator performs better than the diesel generator, in terms of the life cycle costs and the cost per unit energy. The life cycle cost and the cost of energy show a decrease of 75% each. The environmental analysis implies that the solar PV energy system has the potential to avoid the 9371 kg of carbon dioxide if the system is implemented in the future at KPHC. The proposed powered system will supply electricity for the laboratory equipment (centrifuges, microscopes, blood chemical analyzer, hematology analyzer, CD4 machine), vaccine-refrigeration, general purpose refrigerator, computer and telecommunications, while being able to cater to a greater number of patients than in the past.
url https://www.rees-journal.org/articles/rees/full_html/2021/01/rees200006/rees200006.html
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