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Drinking water and health Luiza Gharibyan

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Title: Drinking water and health Luiza Gharibyan


1
Drinking water and
healthLuiza Gharibyan
  • Associate professor of Yerevan State Medical
    University
  • Department Hygiene and Ecology

2
WHO Water/Health Facts
  • Every 8 seconds a child dies of water-related
    disease
  • 5 million per year die of illnesses linked to
  • unsafe drinking water,
  • unclean domestic environments, and
  • improper excreta disposal.
  • Nearly ΒΌ of humanity remains without proper
    access to water and sanitation
  • http//www.who.int/inf-fs/en/fact112.html

3
Classification of water
  • Ground water. Underground waters are protected
    for just one use, as an actual or potential
    source of drinking water. All ground water is
    designated as Class 1.
  • Surface water. All surface waters, lakes, rivers,
    streams and wetlands in Minnesota are either
    Class 2, protected for aquatic life and
    recreation, or Class 7, designated as Limited
    Resource Value Waters. In addition, all surface
    waters (i.e., both Class 2s and 7s) are protected
    for industrial use (Class 3), agricultural uses
    (Class 4A and 4B), aesthetics and navigation
    (Class 5), and other uses (Class 6). Thus, all
    surface waters are protected for multiple uses.

4
  • The detection of these constituents in both raw
    water and water delivered to consumers is often
    slow, complex and costly, which limits early
    warning capability and affordability.

5
  • Reliance on water quality determination alone is
    insufficient to protect public health.
    As it is neither physically nor
    economically feasible to test for all
    drinking-water quality parameters equally,
    monitoring effort and resources should be
    carefully planned and directed at significant or
    key characteristics.

6
  • Some characteristics not related to health, such
    as those with significant aesthetic impacts, may
    also be of importance. Where water has
    unacceptable aesthetic characteristics (e.g.
    taste and odour), further investigation may be
    required to determine whether there are problems
    with significance for health.

7
  • Verification
  • Verification is the use of methods, procedures or
    tests to determine if the WSP is in compliance
    with the stated objectives outlined by the water
    quality targets and/or whether the WSP needs
    modification and revalidation.

8
  • Verification of Microbial Quality
  • For microbial quality, verification is likely to
    include some microbiological testing. In most
    cases will involve the analysis of faecal
    indicator micro-organisms, but in some countries
    this may include assessment of pathogen densities
    also.

9
  • Approaches to verification could include testing
    of source water, influents and effluents of unit
    processes, treatment end-point product and
    distribution systems. Conventional faecal
    indicator bacteria such as E. coli serves as the
    primary indicator for verification purposes, but
    at times and under certain circumstances it may
    be desirable to include more resistant
    microorganisms such as bacteriophages, bacterial
    spores.

10
  • Such circumstances could include the use of
    source water known to be contaminated with
    enteric viruses and parasites or high levels of
    viral and parasitic diseases in the community.

11
  • Since incremental improvement and prioritizing
    action in systems presenting greatest overall
    risk to public health are important, there are
    advantages in adopting a grading scheme for the
    relative safety of supplies. More sophisticated
    grading schemes may be of particular use in
    community supplies where the frequency of testing
    is low and reliance on analytical results is
    particularly inappropriate.

12
Verification of chemical water quality
  • Assessment of the adequacy of the chemical
    quality of drinking-water relies on comparison of
    the results of water quality analysis with
    Guideline Values.

13
  • For most chemicals leading to adverse effects
    after long periods of exposures and arising from
    water sources, the quality of water in supply is
    determined by chemical analysis and compared
    directly with tables of drinking-water guidelines
    or national drinking-water standards.

14
  • For additives, i.e., chemicals deriving primarily
    from materials and chemicals used in the
    production and distribution of drinking-water,
    emphasis is placed on the direct control of
    additives, rather than control of water in
    distribution.

15
  • Some hazardous chemicals that occur in
    drinking-water are of concern because of effects
    arising from single exposures or sequences of
    exposures over a short period.

16
  • Where the concentration of the chemical of
    interest varies widely, even a series of
    analytical results may fail to fully identify and
    describe the public health risk, for example
    nitrate which is associated with
    methaemoglobinaemia in bottle fed infants.

17
  • In controlling such hazards, attention must be
    given to both knowledge of causal factors such as
    fertiliser use in agriculture and trends in
    detected concentrations since these will indicate
    whether a significant problem may arise in the
    future.
  • Other hazards may arise intermittently, often
    associated with seasonal activity or seasonal
    conditions. Once example is the occurrence of
    blooms of toxic cyanobacteria in surface water.

18
Identifying priority water quality parameters
  • These Guidelines cover a large number of
    constituents in drinking-water in order to meet
    the varied needs of countries world-wide.

19
  • There are a large number of constituents that may
    potentially occur in water. Generally, only very
    few will be of concern under any given
    circumstance. It is essential that the national
    regulatory agency and local water authorities
    determine the relevance of constituents in local
    drinking-water systems. This will ensure efforts
    and costs can be directed to those constituents
    that are of public health relevance.

20
  • Guidelines are established for potentially
    hazardous water constituents and provide a basis
    for assessing drinking-water quality. It is
    recognised that different parameters may require
    different priorities for management to ensure
    public health.

21
In general the progression of priority is such
that
  • Ensure an adequate supply of microbiologically
    safe water
  • Manage key inorganic contaminants known to cause
    adverse health effects in humans
  • Maintain acceptability of drinking-water quality
    to prevent consumers seeking other potentially
    less microbiologically safe supplies
  • Address other chemical contaminants

22
Assessing microbial priorities
  • The most common and widespread health risk
    associated with drinking-water is microbial
    contamination, the consequences of which are such
    that its control must always be of paramount
    importance. It may be impossible to attain the
    targets population-wide in the short or medium
    term and it is therefore necessary to ensure that
    priority is given to improving and developing
    water supplies to populations at greatest public
    health risk.

23
  • Microbial contamination of large systems has the
    potential to affect a large number of people
    through potentially large outbreaks of
    water-borne disease. Improvement of quality in
    such systems is therefore a priority.

24
  • Nevertheless, the majority (around 80?) of the
    global population without access to improved
    water supply is rural. Similarly small and
    community supplies in most countries contribute
    disproportionately to overall water quality
    concerns. Identifying local and national priories
    should take factors such as these into account.

25
Assessing chemical priorities
  • The selection of chemicals for consideration in
    the Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality takes
    into account the frequency and concentration that
    the chemical is detected in drinking-water,
    and/or those for which member states have
    specifically requested guidance because of a
    range of concerns. Guideline values are developed
    for those chemicals considered to be potentially
    hazardous to human health and occur significantly
    at concentrations of concern for public health.

26
  • The selection of chemicals for consideration in
    the Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality takes
    into account the frequency and concentration that
    the chemical is detected in drinking-water,
    and/or those for which member states have
    specifically requested guidance because of a
    range of concerns. Guideline values are developed
    for those chemicals considered to be potentially
    hazardous to human health and occur significantly
    at concentrations of concern for public health.

27
  • Risk management efforts and resources should give
    priority to those chemicals in water systems that
    pose a risk to human health, or to those with
    significant aesthetic impacts.

28
  • Only a few chemicals have been shown to cause
    widespread actual health effects in humans as a
    consequence of exposure through drinking-water.
    These should be addressed in all circumstances in
    priority setting and include fluoride, arsenic,
    nitrate and lead.

29
  • In some cases, assessment will indicate that no
    risk of significant exposure exists at national,
    regional or system level. However, the scale of
    health effects associated with these chemicals
    indicates that they should be considered under
    all circumstances.

30
Water, sanitation and health the
current situation
  • The prevailing worldwide situation regarding
    water supply and sanitation services is a source
    of concern in different respects.

31
  • Globally, some 1.1 billion people are currently
    without access to improved water supply and about
    2.4 billion don't benefit from any form of
    improved sanitation services (figures for 2000).
    The majority of these people live in Asia and
    Africa. In Africa, for example, two out of five
    people lack improved water supply.

32
  • Significant discrepancies between rural and urban
    services continue to contribute to the burdened
    life in rural areas. On the other hand, the
    world-wide urbanization causes a great number of
    people to live in informal, overcrowded
    peri-urban settlements where coverage remains
    especially low.

33
  • Other points of concern are the increasing
    pollution of both surface and groundwater sources
    from pesticides, industry and untreated household
    waste waters.

34
  • The over-extraction of water for agriculture and
    manufacturing, which causes the water table to
    decline in many parts of the world, is another
    bad practice which is producing severe
    consequences to the sustainability of these
    resources.

35
Water supply data at global level
  • The percentage of people worldwide who have
    access to an improved water supply has risen from
    78 in 1990 to 82 in 2000. Some 902 million more
    people have been served during the decade (537
    million in urban and 365 million in rural areas).

36
  • Data representing 94 of the Asian population
    suggest that only 48 of the population has
    sanitation coverage, by far the lowest of any
    region of the world. The situation is even worse
    in rural areas, where only 31 of the population
    has improved sanitation, compared with 78
    coverage in urban areas.

37
  • Total water coverage in Asia is also the second
    lowest, after Africa, at 81. But again, water
    supply coverage is lower in rural areas (75)
    compared with that in urban areas (93).
  • Because of the population sizes of China and
    India, along with other large nations in the
    region, Asia accounts for the vast majority of
    people in the world without access to improved
    services.

38
  • Eighty percent of the global population without
    access to improved sanitation, and almost
    two-thirds without access to improved water
    supply, live in Asia.
  • At present, approximately one-third of the Asian
    population is urban and two-thirds live in rural
    areas. But this balance is predicted to shift
    over the coming decades. By the year 2015, the
    urban population is projected to be 45 of the
    region's total, and grow to just over one-half of
    the total Asian population by 2025.

39
  • To meet the international development target of
    halving the proportion of people without access
    to improved services by 2015, an additional 1.5
    billion people in Asia will need to access to
    sanitation facilities, while an additional 980
    million will need access to water supply.

40
Water-related Diseases
  • Potential water borne pathogens
  • BacteriaVibrio choleraeShigella
    CampylobacterFrancisella tularensisAeromonas
    Legionella pneumophilaSalmonellaToxigenic
    Escherichia coliLeptospiraYersinia
    enterocoliticaHelicobacter pylori

41
Viruses Norwalk and Norwalk-likeRotavirusHepati
tis A and E
  • Protozoa
  • Giardia lambliaNaegleria fowleriEntamoeba
    histolyticaIsospora belliToxoplasma
    gondiiCryptosporidium parvumAcanthamoebaCyclosp
    ora cayetanensisBallantidium coliMicrosporidia

42
  • Typhoid and paratyphoid enteric fevers
  • Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers are infections
    caused by bacteria which are transmitted from
    faeces to ingestion. Clean water, hygiene and
    good sanitation prevent the spread of typhoid and
    paratyphoid. Contaminated water is one of the
    pathways of transmission of the disease

43
  • The disease and how it affects people
  • Typhoid fever is a bacterial infection of the
    intestinal tract and bloodstream. Symptoms can be
    mild or severe and include sustained fever as
    high as 39-40 C, malaise, anorexia, headache,
    constipation or diarrhoea, rose-coloured spots on
    the chest area and enlarged spleen and liver.
    Most people show symptoms 1-3 weeks after
    exposure. Paratyphoid fever has similar symptoms
    to typhoid fever but is generally a milder
    disease.

44
The cause
  • Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers are caused by the
    bacteria Salmonella typhi and Salmonella
    paratyphi respectively. Typhoid and paratyphoid
    germs are passed in the faeces and urine of
    infected people. People become infected after
    eating food or drinking beverages that have been
    handled by a person who is infected or by
    drinking water that has been contaminated by
    sewage containing the bacteria. Once the bacteria
    enter the persons body they multiply and spread
    from the intestines, into the bloodstream.

45
Distribution
  • Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers are common in
    less-industrialized countries, principally owing
    to the problem of unsafe drinking-water,
    inadequate sewage disposal and flooding.

46
Scope of the Problem
  • The annual incidence of typhoid is estimated to
    be about 17 million cases worldwide.

47
Interventions
  • Public health interventions to prevent typhoid
    and paratyphoid include
  • health education about personal hygiene,
    especially regarding hand-washing after toilet
    use and before food preparation provision of a
    safe water supply
  • proper sanitation systems
  • excluding disease carriers from food handling.

48
  • Diarrhoea about 4 billion cases per year cause
    2.2 million deaths, mostly among children under
    five.
  • Intestinal worms infect about 10 of the
    population of the developing world and, depending
    upon the severity of the infection, lead to
    malnutrition, anaemia or retarded growth

49
  • Trachoma about 6 million people are blind from
    trachoma. Studies found that providing improved
    water supply could reduce the infection rate by
    25.
  • Schistosomiasis about 200 million people are
    infected with schistosomiasis. Studies found that
    improved water supply and sanitation could reduce
    infection rate by 77.
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