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Evidence Supporting Yearly Community Well Testing

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The arsenic drinking water standard was revised from 50 g/L to 10 g/L ... UW-Madison academic committee. Well test program staff. NINR pre-doctoral fellowship ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evidence Supporting Yearly Community Well Testing


1
Evidence Supporting Yearly Community Well Testing
  • Lori Severtson1,2 RN MS
  • Linda Baumann1, RN PhD
  • 1School of Nursing
  • 2Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental
    Studies
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison

2
Background Information
  • The arsenic drinking water standard was revised
    from 50 µg/L to 10 µg/L in late 2001. This
    revision was politically contentious.
  • A well test program (WTP) was offered to
    communities in a geographic area of the state
    where 23.5 of wells gt 10 µg/L.
  • The adoption of the new arsenic drinking water
    standard was measured by assessing peoples
    personal arsenic safety thresholds the highest
    level they consider as safe.
  • Community awareness may also play a role
  • Communities can have different levels of
    awareness about an environmental risk, and can be
    aware for different reasons.
  • Community awareness may increase the adoption of
    new information.

3
The purpose of this study was to explore
differences among two types of high awareness
communities and low awareness communities.
  • These factors were compared
  • Risk information use
  • Perceived usefulness
  • Risk recognition
  • Trust in information sources
  • Opinions of revised arsenic drinking water
    standard
  • Personal arsenic safety threshold

4
Demographics
  • Study Sample
  • All WTP participants gt 5 µg/L
  • N 1154
  • Random Sample 1 4 µg/L
  • N 99
  • Random Sample No WTP Test
  • N 259
  • No test
  • Private test

Male 57.8
Children in home 48.6
Mean Age 52.0
Mean Years in home 15.5
Mean Education Post HS
Response rate 85.4 Returned N 1233
5
Adopting new risk information
What arsenic level did people select as the
highest level considered as safe?
6
Personal Safety Threshold highest safe level
About 45 selected a safety threshold that was in
the range of the new arsenic standard large
variability in the remaining 55
7
Community factors arsenic risk awareness
  • High risk - high awareness n 400
  • Publicity
  • Low risk - high awareness n 200
  • Education (WTP 3 times)
  • High risk - low awareness n 200
  • Low risk - low awareness n 365

8
Average arsenic level among towns
High risk
9
Total information use
10
Information Perceived Usefulness
11
Problem recognition Town wells at risk
12
10 µg/L (new standard) too strict
13
Safety threshold Highest level considered safe
14
Trust in federal and town government
15
Conclusions forHigh versus low awareness
communities
  • Participants in a high awareness community
  • Use more information
  • Have higher levels of risk recognition
  • than participants in low awareness communities.

16
Conclusions forYearly well testing versus high
publicity
  • Participants in a community offering yearly well
    testing
  • Rated information as more useful
  • Selected a lower arsenic safety threshold
  • Disagreed that 10 ug/L was too strict
  • Had more confidence in how their town government
    is dealing with arsenic is
  • than participants in a high publicity community.

17
Implications for Practice
  • Ongoing educational programs are more effective
    than one-time programs.
  • While high publicity was related to information
    use and to recognizing risk, education seemed to
    be a factor in the adoption of a lower drinking
    water standard

18
Limitations
  • Tentative findings!!!
  • Only 2 high awareness communities
  • 1 due to increased publicity
  • 1 due to increased education
  • Interpret as case study findings
  • Acknowledgments
  • Funded by ATSDR/Wisconsin DHFS
  • UW-Madison academic committee
  • Well test program staff
  • NINR pre-doctoral fellowship
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