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Home water treatment 'is best for fighting disease'

Zi Xun

19 July 2006 | EN | 中文

Water supply is one of the issues highlighted in the report

Women filling water containers from a well in Ethiopia

WHO/P. Virot

[BEIJING] Treating water in homes is a more effective way of controlling diarrhoea in poor countries than interventions at wells.

So concludes a review published today (19 July) by The Cochrane Collaboration.

Its authors, led by Thomas Clasen of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in the United Kingdom, considered the outcomes of 30 field trials involving more than 53,000 participants.

The trials, which compared the effectiveness of different water treatments, were mostly carried out in the developing world.

Unsafe drinking water is the main cause of more than 1.8 million deaths from diarrhoea in developing countries each year.

Differences in the trial's methods and settings limit the extent to which generalisations can be made, but the researchers say that all the treatment procedures were effective at preventing diarrhoea in people of all ages.

The results suggest that the health gains associated with safe drinking water can be achieved by providing people with simple, affordable technologies, such as chlorination, filtration, solar disinfection and improved storage in their homes, Clasen told SciDev.Net.

He says that delivering clean water directly to people's homes can significantly reduce episodes of diarrhoea, but this demands considerable expenditure on infrastructure.

This would currently be too costly to maintain in developing countries, where 1.1 billion people do not have sustainable access to water within a kilometre of their home, says Clasen.

"Our challenge now is to show that these interventions can be disseminated at [large] scale on a sustainable basis," says Clasen.

Comments (1)

Dr.A.Jagadeesh ( Nayudamma Centre for Development Alternatives | India )

15 February 2010

This is an interesting article.The innovative solar disinfection system has a wooden frame of length 2 ft,width 1 foot and depth 6 inches with bottom sinusoidal shaped polished stainless steel (curvature slightly larger than standard glass wine bottles, about 5 inches diameter) . On the front is fixed a glass sheet having lifting arrangement with a knob (this glass enclosure will protect the glass bottles from cooling down due to outside wind). There are screws which can be used to keep the contents airtight. On the backside a stand is fixed which will help the unit to be placed according to the latitude of the place for maximum solar insolation. In this method clear glass bottles (used wine bottles) are utilised instead of PET bottles as the former are easy to clean, lasts longer and are available at a low cost in India. Solar disinfection is more efficient in water containing high levels of oxygen; sunlight produces highly reactive forms of oxygen (oxygen free radicals and hydrogen peroxides) in the water. These reactive forms of oxygen kill the microorganisms. Aeration of water is achieved by shaking the 3/4 water filled bottles for about 20 seconds before they are filled completely.

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