| Literature DB >> 32722553 |
Varun Goel1, Griffin J Bell2, Sumati Sridhar3, Md Sirajul Islam4, Md Yunus4, Md Taslim Ali4, Md Alfazal Khan4, Md Nurul Alam4, Asg Faruque4, Md Masnoon Kabir4, Shahabuddin Babu4, Katerina Brandt1, Victoria Shelus2, Mark D Sobsey2, Michael Emch1,2.
Abstract
Deep tubewells are a key component of arsenic mitigation programs in rural Bangladesh. Compared to widely prevalent shallow tubewells, deep tubewells reduce ground-water arsenic exposure and provide better microbial water quality at source. However, the benefits of clean drinking-water at these more distant sources may be abated by higher levels of microbial contamination at point-of-use. One such potential pathway is the use of contaminated surface water for washing drinking-water storage containers. The aim of this study is to compare the prevalence of surface water use for washing drinking-water storage containers among deep and shallow tubewell users in a cohort of 499 rural residents in Matlab, Bangladesh. We employ a multi-level logistic regression model to measure the effect of tubewell type and ownership status on the odds of washing storage containers with surface water. Results show that deep tubewell users who do not own their drinking-water tubewell, have 6.53 times the odds [95% CI: 3.56, 12.00] of using surface water for cleaning storage containers compared to shallow tubewell users, who own their drinking-water source. Even deep tubewell users who own a private well within walking distance have 2.53 [95% CI: 1.36, 4.71] times the odds of using surface water compared to their shallow tubewell counterparts. These results highlight the need for interventions to limit risk substitution, particularly the increased use of contaminated surface water when access to drinking water is reduced. Increasing ownership of and proximity to deep tubewells, although crucial, is insufficient to achieve equity in safe drinking-water access across rural Bangladesh.Entities:
Keywords: Bangladesh; arsenic mitigation; drinking water quality; household water storage; risk substitution
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722553 PMCID: PMC7432608 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17155372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Summary of Households by Tubewell Type.
| Variables | Shallow ( | Deep ( |
|---|---|---|
| Households using surface water for washing storage containers. (%) | 72 (28.45) | 124 (50.41) |
|
| ||
| Inside Bari | 212 (83.79) | 108 (43.90) |
| Outside Bari | 41 (16.21) | 138 (56.10) |
|
| ||
| (Poorest) Quantile 1 | 39 (15.41) | 37 (15.04) |
| Quantile 2 | 45 (17.79) | 47 (19.11) |
| Quantile 3 | 44 (17.39) | 45 (18.29) |
| Quantile 4 | 66 (26.09) | 55 (22.36) |
| (Richest) Quantile 5 | 56 (22.13) | 54 (21.95) |
| Missing | 3 (1.19) | 8 (3.25) |
|
| ||
| Mean (SD) | 3.91 (3.84) | 3.94 (3.96) |
| Missing (%) | 3 (1.19) | 8 (3.25) |
Odds Ratios (OR) comparing the use of surface water while washing drinking-water storage containers by tubewell and ownership type.
| Comparison Group | Reference Group | Crude OR (95% CI) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deep Tubewell (Inside Bari) | Shallow Tubewell (Inside Bari) | 2.21 (1.21, 4.04) | 2.53 (1.36, 4.71) |
| Deep Tubewell (Outside Bari) | Shallow Tubewell (Outside Bari) | 0.70 (0.31, 1.62) | 0.69 (0.30, 1.63) |
| Shallow Tubewell (Outside Bari) | Shallow Tubewell (Inside Bari) | 10.53 (4.57, 24.24) | 9.42 (4.04, 21.96) |
| Deep Tubewell (Outside Bari) | Deep Tubewell (Inside Bari) | 3.35 (1.89, 5.95) | 2.58 (1.40, 4.74) |
| Deep Tubewell (Outside Bari) | Shallow Tubewell (Inside Bari) | 7.40 (4.07, 13.45) | 6.53 (3.56, 12.00) |
| Shallow Tubewell (Outside Bari) | Deep Tubewell (Inside Bari) | 4.77 (2.01, 11.30) | 3.72 (1.53, 9.03) |