| Literature DB >> 31297273 |
Mary E Schoen1, Michael A Jahne2, Jay L Garland2.
Abstract
We used quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) to estimate the microbial risks from two contamination pathways in onsite non-potable water systems (ONWS): contamination of potable water by (treated) reclaimed, non-potable water and contamination of reclaimed, non-potable water by wastewater or greywater. A range of system sizes, event durations, fraction of users exposed, and intrusion dilutions were considered (chlorine residual disinfection was not included). The predicted annual microbial infection risk from domestic, non-potable reuse remained below the selected benchmark given isolated, short-duration intrusion (i.e., 5-day) events of reclaimed water in potable water. Whereas, intrusions of wastewater into reclaimed, non-potable water resulted in unacceptable annual risk without large dilutions or pathogen inactivation. We predicted that 1 user out of 10,000 could be exposed to a 5-day contamination event of undiluted wastewater in the reclaimed, non-potable water system each year to meet the annual benchmark risk of 10-4 infections per person per year; whereas, 1 user out of 1000 could be exposed to a 5-day contamination event of undiluted reclaimed water in the potable water each year. Overall, the predicted annual risks support the use of previously derived non-potable reuse treatment requirements for a variety of ONWS sizes and support the prioritization of protective measures to prevent the intrusion of wastewater into domestic ONWS.Entities:
Keywords: QMRA; cross-connection; greywater; non-potable; onsite; reclaimed; wastewater
Year: 2018 PMID: 31297273 PMCID: PMC6621552 DOI: 10.3390/w10101352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4441 Impact factor: 3.103
Figure 1.The 95th percentile event probability of infection for ingestion of domestic, non-potable reclaimed wastewater contaminated by domestic wastewater (bars) or domestic, non-potable reclaimed greywater contaminated by domestic greywater (diamonds), both generated by a 1000-person residential collection system. The dilution factor is expressed as 1-part intrusion water: X parts total water. Both upper- (up) and lower- (low) bound dose-response presented.
Figure 2.Target dilution factor foo intrusion of non-potable reclaimed wastewater (generated by 1000-person collection and treated for indoor reuse) to potable water that results in 95th percentile annual risk of infection from non-potable domestic, indoor reuse equivalent to the benchmark (10−4 ppy). The intrusion event duration was either 1, 5, or 30 days for various fractions of the population exposed to the intrusion event (fr). The dilution factor is expressed as 1-part intrusion water: X parts total water.
Non-potable indoor use log10 pathogen reductions targets for healthy adults given the 10−4 ppy (infection) benchmark for domestic wastewater and greywater assuming either the occurrence of a cross-connection event (CC) [2,9] or no event [a].
| Indoor use with CC[ | 11.2/8.4 | 8.8 | 6.8/5.9 | 6.1 | 6.0 | 3.8 |
| Indoor use without CC | 9.8/7 | 8.1 | 6.3/5.4 | 5.0 | 5.5 | 2.9 |
| Greywater | ||||||
| Indoor use with CC [ | 8.8/6.0 | 6.4 | 4.5/3.6 | 3.8 | 3.7 | 1.6 |
| Indoor use without CC | 7.9/5.1 | 6.0 | 4.1/3.2 | 3.4 | 3.3 | 0.7 |
Assumed 4 × 10−5 L of water consumed per day for 365 days a year with 10% of the population ingesting 2 L per day for 1 day of the year [9].
Upper and lower bound dose-response presented for Norovirus [17,18] and Cryptosporidium spp. [20,21].