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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Not Just a Drop in the Bucket: Expanding Access to Point-of-Use Water Treatment Systems

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TLDR
Self-sustaining, decentralized approaches to making drinking water safe, including point-of-use chemical and solar disinfection, safe water storage, and behavioral change, have been widely field-tested and merit far greater priority for rapid implementation.
Abstract
Since 1990, the number of people without access to safe water sources has remained constant at approximately 1.1 billion, of whom approximately 2.2 million die of waterborne disease each year. In developing countries, population growth and migrations strain existing water and sanitary infrastructure and complicate planning and construction of new infrastructure. Providing safe water for all is a long-term goal; however, relying only on time- and resource-intensive centralized solutions such as piped, treated water will leave hundreds of millions of people without safe water far into the future. Self-sustaining, decentralized approaches to making drinking water safe, including point-of-use chemical and solar disinfection, safe water storage, and behavioral change, have been widely field-tested. These options target the most affected, enhance health, contribute to development and productivity, and merit far greater priority for rapid implementation.

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Citations
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Managing Water in the Home: Accelerated Health Gains from Improved Water Supply

TL;DR: There is now conclusive evidence that simple, acceptable, low-cost interventions at the household and community level are capable of dramatically improving the microbial quality of household stored water and reducing the attendant risks of diarrheal disease and death.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decentralized systems for potable water and the potential of membrane technology.

TL;DR: It can be concluded that there are good prospects for decentralized systems based on membranes, but that a need exists for research and development of systems with low costs and low maintenance, specifically designed for DC and TC.
Book ChapterDOI

Metarhizium spp., cosmopolitan insect-pathogenic fungi: mycological aspects.

TL;DR: The rapid increase in research on Metarhizium, followed by sustained high scientific output, can be explained by several important worldwide attitude changes and the initiation of several promising MetarHizium -based pest-control and molecular-biology efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Treating water with chlorine at point-of-use to improve water quality and reduce child diarrhea in developing countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: A major finding from this review is that nearly all trials on this topic have been short, and although not statistically significant, an attenuation of the intervention's reduction of child diarrhea in longer trials is observed.
Journal Article

Interventions to improve water quality for preventing diarrhoea (review).

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted randomized and quasi-randomized controlled trials comparing interventions aimed at improving the microbiological quality of drinking water with no intervention in children and adults living in settings where diarrhoeal disease is endemic.
References
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Journal Article

Interventions for the control of diarrhoeal diseases among young children: improving water supplies and excreta disposal facilities.

TL;DR: In poor communities with inadequate water supply and excreta disposal, reducing the level of enteric pathogen ingestion by a given amount will have a greater impact on diarrhoea mortality rates than on morbidity rates.
Book

The Sanitary City: Urban Infrastructure in America from Colonial Times to the Present

TL;DR: The Sanitary City as mentioned in this paper provides a comprehensive history of water supply, wastewater, and solid waste disposal systems in American cities from colonial times to the year 2000, with an analysis of their development, an assessment of their influence on urban growth, and an evaluation of their impact on the environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solar disinfection of drinking water contained in transparent plastic bottles : characterizing the bacterial inactivation process

TL;DR: Solar disinfection of drinking water is an effective, low cost method for improving water quality and may be of particular use to refugee camps in disaster areas and strategies for improving bacterial inactivation are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Safe water treatment and storage in the home. A practical new strategy to prevent waterborne disease.

TL;DR: This work describes a two-component prevention strategy, which allows an individual to disinfect drinking water immediately after collection and then to store the water in narrow-mouthed, closed vessels designed to prevent recontamination (safe storage), and has the potential to decrease the incidence of waterborne diarrheal disease.
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