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Fecal contamination of drinking-water in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Fecal contamination of drinking-water in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Fecal contamination of drinking-water in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Background: access to safe drinking-water is a fundamental requirement for good health and is also a human right. Global access to safe drinking-water is monitored by WHO and UNICEF using as an indicator “use of an improved source,” which does not account for water quality measurements. Our objectives were to determine whether water from “improved” sources is less likely to contain fecal contamination than “unimproved” sources and to assess the extent to which contamination varies by source type and setting.

Methods and findings: studies in Chinese, English, French, Portuguese, and Spanish were identified from online databases, including PubMed and Web of Science, and grey literature. Studies in low- and middle-income countries published between 1990 and August 2013 that assessed drinking-water for the presence of Escherichia coli or thermotolerant coliforms (TTC) were included provided they associated results with a particular source type. In total 319 studies were included, reporting on 96,737 water samples. The odds of contamination within a given study were considerably lower for “improved” sources than “unimproved” sources (odds ratio [OR] = 0.15 [0.10–0.21], I2 = 80.3% [72.9–85.6]). However over a quarter of samples from improved sources contained fecal contamination in 38% of 191 studies. Water sources in low-income countries (OR = 2.37 [1.52–3.71]; p<0.001) and rural areas (OR = 2.37 [1.47–3.81] p<0.001) were more likely to be contaminated. Studies rarely reported stored water quality or sanitary risks and few achieved robust random selection. Safety may be overestimated due to infrequent water sampling and deterioration in quality prior to consumption.

Conclusion: access to an “improved source” provides a measure of sanitary protection but does not ensure water is free of fecal contamination nor is it consistent between source types or settings. International estimates therefore greatly overstate use of safe drinking-water and do not fully reflect disparities in access. An enhanced monitoring strategy would combine indicators of sanitary protection with measures of water quality
1549-1277
e1001644
Bain, R.
ad9d875b-1b72-4018-a0b4-e1d872e6d039
Cronk, R.
e1714ce6-b6dd-4bc9-8b08-0335da1d52f8
Wright, J.A.
94990ecf-f8dd-4649-84f2-b28bf272e464
Yang, Hong
2ea2c94c-8d28-4555-98f9-59b615b0cee7
Slaymaker, T.
451f5fa8-3abc-4d0d-8513-fffcf929095c
Bartram, J.
89ea4745-2e0b-41c7-bcb7-909ff36fa902
Bain, R.
ad9d875b-1b72-4018-a0b4-e1d872e6d039
Cronk, R.
e1714ce6-b6dd-4bc9-8b08-0335da1d52f8
Wright, J.A.
94990ecf-f8dd-4649-84f2-b28bf272e464
Yang, Hong
2ea2c94c-8d28-4555-98f9-59b615b0cee7
Slaymaker, T.
451f5fa8-3abc-4d0d-8513-fffcf929095c
Bartram, J.
89ea4745-2e0b-41c7-bcb7-909ff36fa902

Bain, R., Cronk, R., Wright, J.A., Yang, Hong, Slaymaker, T. and Bartram, J. (2014) Fecal contamination of drinking-water in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS Medicine, 11 (5), e1001644. (doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001644).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: access to safe drinking-water is a fundamental requirement for good health and is also a human right. Global access to safe drinking-water is monitored by WHO and UNICEF using as an indicator “use of an improved source,” which does not account for water quality measurements. Our objectives were to determine whether water from “improved” sources is less likely to contain fecal contamination than “unimproved” sources and to assess the extent to which contamination varies by source type and setting.

Methods and findings: studies in Chinese, English, French, Portuguese, and Spanish were identified from online databases, including PubMed and Web of Science, and grey literature. Studies in low- and middle-income countries published between 1990 and August 2013 that assessed drinking-water for the presence of Escherichia coli or thermotolerant coliforms (TTC) were included provided they associated results with a particular source type. In total 319 studies were included, reporting on 96,737 water samples. The odds of contamination within a given study were considerably lower for “improved” sources than “unimproved” sources (odds ratio [OR] = 0.15 [0.10–0.21], I2 = 80.3% [72.9–85.6]). However over a quarter of samples from improved sources contained fecal contamination in 38% of 191 studies. Water sources in low-income countries (OR = 2.37 [1.52–3.71]; p<0.001) and rural areas (OR = 2.37 [1.47–3.81] p<0.001) were more likely to be contaminated. Studies rarely reported stored water quality or sanitary risks and few achieved robust random selection. Safety may be overestimated due to infrequent water sampling and deterioration in quality prior to consumption.

Conclusion: access to an “improved source” provides a measure of sanitary protection but does not ensure water is free of fecal contamination nor is it consistent between source types or settings. International estimates therefore greatly overstate use of safe drinking-water and do not fully reflect disparities in access. An enhanced monitoring strategy would combine indicators of sanitary protection with measures of water quality

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 April 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 May 2014
Published date: 6 May 2014
Organisations: Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 364457
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/364457
ISSN: 1549-1277
PURE UUID: 33161c28-8915-479b-a9a2-40692d2d8453
ORCID for J.A. Wright: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8842-2181

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Date deposited: 08 May 2014 08:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:21

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Contributors

Author: R. Bain
Author: R. Cronk
Author: J.A. Wright ORCID iD
Author: Hong Yang
Author: T. Slaymaker
Author: J. Bartram

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