Abstract

In-house contamination of drinking-water is a persistent problem in developing countries. This study aimed at identifying critical points of contamination and determining the extent of recontamination after water treatment. In total, 81 households were visited, and 347 water samples from their current sources of water, transport vessels, treated water, and drinking vessels were analyzed. The quality of water was assessed using Escherichia coli as an indicator for faecal contamination. The concentration of E. coli increased significantly from the water source [median=0 colony-forming unit (CFU)/100 mL, interquartile range (IQR: 0-13)] to the drinking cup (median=8 CFU/100 mL; IQR: 0-550; n=81, z=-3.7, p<0.001). About two-thirds (34/52) of drinking vessels were contaminated with E. coli. Although boiling and solar disinfection of water (SODIS) improved the quality of drinking-water (median=0 CFU/100 mL; IQR: 0-0.05), recontamination at the point-of-consumption significantly reduced the quality of water in the cups (median=8, IQR: 0-500; n=45, z=-2.4, p=0.015). Home-based interventions in disinfection of water may not guarantee health benefits without complementary hygiene education due to the risk of post-treatment contamination. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Quality of Drinking-water at Source and Point-of-consumption-Drinking Cup As a High Potential Recontamination Risk: A Field Study in Bolivia
Author
Rufener, Simonne; Mäusezahl, Daniel; Mosler, Hans-Joachim; Weingartner, Rolf
Pages
34-41
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Feb 2010
Publisher
BioMed Central
ISSN
16060997
e-ISSN
20721315
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
202996905
Copyright
Copyright Intenational Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh Feb 2010