Publication | Open Access
REDUCING DIARRHEA THROUGH THE USE OF HOUSEHOLD-BASED CERAMIC WATER FILTERS: A RANDOMIZED, CONTROLLED TRIAL IN RURAL BOLIVIA
188
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Drinking WaterSource Water ProtectionSanitationEngineeringWater ContaminationEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental HealthWater PurificationTraveler DiarrheaWater TreatmentWater QualityWaterborne DiseasesRural CommunityPublic HealthWater Quality ManagementDrinking Water TreatmentCeramic Water FiltersReducing Diarrhea
Ceramic water filters have been identified as one of the most promising and accessible technologies for treating water at the household level. In a six-month trial, water filters were distributed randomly to half of the 50 participating households in a rural community in Bolivia; the remaining households continued to use customary water handling practices and served as controls. In four rounds of sampling following distribution of the filters, 100% of the 96 water samples from the filter households were free of thermotolerant coliforms compared with 15.5% of the control household samples. Diarrheal disease risk for individuals in intervention households was 70% lower than for controls (95% confidence interval [CI] = 53-80%; P < 0.001). For children less than five years old, the reduction in risk was 83% (95% CI = 51-94%; P < 0.001). These results show that affordable ceramic water filters enable low-income households to treat and maintain the microbiologic quality of their drinking water.
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