Study Links Water Storage Contamination to Dirty Hands

Scientists are reporting new real-world evidence supporting the idea that hand washing can prevent the spread of waterborne disease.

The evidence appears in a new study showing a connection between fecal bacteria contamination on hands, fecal contamination of stored drinking water, and health in households in a developing country in Africa. The study is in Environmental Science & Technology, a semi-monthly journal.

Alexandria Boehm, Jenna Davis, and their students note that almost half of the world’s population — over 3 billion people — have no access to municipal drinking water supply systems. They obtain drinking water from wells, springs, and other sources, and store it in jugs and other containers in their homes. Past research showed that this stored water can have higher levels of bacterial contamination than its source. But nobody knew why.

The scientists found a strong link between fecal contamination on the hands of household residents and bacterial contamination in stored water in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Stored water contained nearly 100 times more fecal bacteria than the water source. “The results suggest that reducing fecal contamination on hands should be investigated as a strategy for improving stored drinking water quality and health among households using non-networked water supplies,” the report notes.

Comments

Thu, Jul 15, 2010 Mark Michigan

Hello: Alan is right. Also, what a stupid study to prove something that was figured out in the 1800s - washing your hands gets rid of almost all germs. The obvious point is that a lot of the poor in Africa don't have access to clean water to wash their hands such as from a sink that discharges to a septic; they don't have a place to wash their hands and don't bother. This has been one of the tragic stories for Africa over the past 100 years; no government or popular sentiment to help setup the necessary sanitary infrastructure. Money goes to other things such as a cell phone or DVD player.

Wed, Jul 14, 2010 Therese Baer Austin, TX

Was DNA testing used to prove it was human feces and not feces of rodents or other wildlife that might contact the water?

Thu, Jul 8, 2010 Alan Koos

REALLY ! Who would have thunk it? " ...reducing fecal contamination on hands should be investigated as a strategy for improving stored drinking water quality ..." Wow, a real breakthrough in public health and hygiene.

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