季节性和多水源使用对家庭供水服务水平的影响

Ryan Cronk , J. Wren Tracy , Jamie Bartram
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引用次数: 0

摘要

普遍获得安全管理的饮用水(SMDW)对人类健康、福祉和发展非常重要。它体现在可持续发展目标(SDG)6 中。在中低收入国家的农村地区,有 19 亿人无法获得安全管理的饮用水。多水源使用和季节性水源转换可能会抵消 SMDW 带来的健康和发展收益。因此,实现可持续发展目标 6 需要更好地了解这些因素与家庭服务水平的关系。我们利用从 14 个中低收入国家(埃塞俄比亚、加纳、洪都拉斯、印度、肯尼亚、马拉维、马里、莫桑比克、尼日尔、卢旺达、坦桑尼亚、乌干达、赞比亚、津巴布韦)农村地区收集的 37105 份家庭调查数据和 6395 份家庭饮用水样本进行了探讨。10% 的家庭在雨季和旱季使用不同的主要水源;季节性水源转换在肯尼亚家庭中最常见(29%),在赞比亚家庭中最不常见(3%)。23% 的家庭使用第二水源,其中 37% 的第二水源未经改良(如无保护的挖井和地表水)。69%的家庭水样中含有大肠杆菌。在所研究的 14 个国家中,有 11 个国家的供水服务参数受到粪便污染,导致家庭无法在使用时获得不受粪便污染的 SMDW。总体而言,7%的家庭在使用时可获得不受粪便污染的SMDW。我们的研究结果证实,世界卫生组织/联合国儿童基金会供水、环境卫生和个人卫生联合监测计划(JMP)在很大程度上夸大了受益于安全管理饮用水的人口数量,因此在解释其报告统计数据时应谨慎。在一些国家,季节性水源转换和二次水源使用具有重要影响,应在监测和计划活动中加以考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The influence of seasonality and multiple water source use on household water service levels

Universal access to safely managed drinking water (SMDW) is important for human health, well-being, and development. It is reflected in Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 6. In rural areas of low- and middle-income countries, 1.9 billion people lack access to SMDW. Multiple water source use and seasonal source switching may negate health and development gains from SMDW. Hence, achieving SDG 6 requires a better understanding of how these factors relate to household service levels. We explored this using data from 37,105 household surveys and 6395 household drinking water samples collected from rural areas of 14 low- and middle-income countries (Ethiopia, Ghana, Honduras, India, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe). A different primary water source was used in the rainy and dry seasons by 10% of households; seasonal source switching was most common in Kenyan households (29%) and least common in Zambian households (3%). Twenty-three percent of households used a secondary water source, and 37% of these secondary sources were unimproved (e.g., unprotected dug wells and surface water). Sixty-nine percent of household water samples contained E. coli. In 11 of 14 countries studied, fecally contaminated water was the water service parameter preventing households from having SMDW free from fecal contamination at the point of use. Overall, 7% of households had access to SMDW free from contamination at the point of use. Our results confirm that the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation, and Hygiene (JMP) substantively overstate the population benefiting from safely managed drinking water, and their reporting statistics should be interpreted with caution. Seasonal source switching and secondary water source use have an important influence in some countries and should be accounted for in monitoring and programming activities.

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