Talking books to inform Afghan women about health

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Afghan women need health education but as 80% of them are illiterate, traditional pamphlets are just useless.

The solution may lay LeapPad, a cheap electronic book found in suburban U.S. homes and designed to teach reading, and recites out loud to kids when they touch the words on the page.

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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services plans to buy 20,000 LeapPads to educate rural Afghan women about the benefits of immunization, the dangers of sexually transmitted diseases and the perils of some homespun remedies, such as rubbing dirt into cuts to heal them. The special LeapPads talk in either Pashto or Dari, Afghanistan's two most common languages.

"If this works, we can make this a tool across the world," says Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson. "We can use it for AIDS in Africa and for health care in Iraq."

From Wall Street Journal and Silicon Valey.

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» Talking Books in Afghanistan from WorldChanging: Another World Is Here

Near Near Future points us to the US Department of Health and Human Services partnering with (aptly enough) LeapFrog, Inc., to make cheap electronic talking... Read More

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1 Comments:

That's pretty cool stuff but they do tend to break down & create hassle and expense. I wonder if a cardboard picture book with good info graphics would do the job just as well and a hell of alot cheaper.

It is a good idea though! If they can do them in Pashto, you have to wonder why they can't do them in British accent English ;)

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