Publication | Open Access
Gastrointestinal health effects associated with the consumption of drinking water produced by point-of-use domestic reverse-osmosis filtration units
88
Citations
10
References
1991
Year
Source Water ProtectionGastroenterologyTraveler DiarrheaDrinking WaterMicrobial HazardWater TreatmentInfection ControlPublic HealthDrinking Water TreatmentR2a MediumGastrointestinal Health EffectsWaterborne DiseasesWater QualityMicrobiomeEpidemiologyFood SafetyWater TechnologySanitationMicrobial ContaminationEnvironmental EngineeringWater PurificationMicrobiologyMedicineWater ConsumptionBacterial CountsMicrobial Risk Assessment
During a prospective epidemiological study of gastrointestinal health effects associated with the consumption of drinking water produced by reverse-osmosis domestic units, a correlation was demonstrated between the bacterial counts on R2A medium incubated at 35 degrees C and the reported gastrointestinal symptoms in families who used these units. A univariate correlation was found with bacterial counts on R2A medium at 20 degrees C but was confounded by the bacterial counts at 35 degrees C. Other variables, such as family size and amount of water consumed, were not independently explanatory of the rate of illness. These observations raise concerns for the possibility of increased disease associated with certain point-of-use treatment devices for domestic use when high levels of bacterial growth occur.
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