Vaccine Bottle - The Conspriracy

They're sobering statistics: each day, 18,000 children die from ailments such as diarrhoea, malaria, and pneumonia. Nearly half of the complete expires before their first month. Add to the 800 moms who die daily from ailments such as post-partum haemorrhage and infections, higher blood pressure during pregnancy and vaccine bottle unsafe abortions. More than half of these maternal and child deaths occur in countries affected by conflict, disasters and fragility.
A number of these deaths can be avoided through cheap, easy, frequently community-based solutions which enhance local health care, enhance access and help to address health inequities for women, children and adolescents. Working together with its international partners, the Canadian Red Cross has made considerable contributions to saving lives in remote, impoverished regions by enhancing local health programs.
Canadian Red Cross plans to address women's and children's health have particularly demonstrated critical in countries affected by conflict and disaster, where many children and girls are cut off from essential health services. Initiatives have included community-based treatment for children with malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia, wellness promotion, obstetric care through field hospitals Emergency Response Units, pre- and - post-natal maintenance, and sanitation updates.


● Kenya: Within three years, a 45 percent growth in infants exclusively breastfed for six months.
● Honduras: Urging guys to have a larger role in preventing maternal and child mortality.
● Mali: Growing number of teens who obtained a post-natal care visit by 19 percent.
● Pakistan: delivering thousands of messages encouraging women to receive antenatal care.
● Syria: Supporting five nutrition centres to treat malnutrition in children.
These include a metal lid, with rubber in the centre where the needle moves in to draw the liquid vaccination out. It just seems a pity to throw so many cool little bottles off, but they are not recyclable.
I would be interested in taking these off anyone's hands to use for crafts. I didn't even think about asking my vet for theirs but now I'm likely to.
I use comparable bottles for clay projects. I get them from my vets office. She's careful what she gives me. I take them home and clean them up. They decorate them with polymer clay and then give them for bottles of hope. I put my own spin on it and contribute a few back into the vet for people that loose their pets. Vet and staff love it. Make good keep sake bottles for babies first tooth or a lock of hairloss. Stores easily and keeps them protected.