Evaluation of consistent use, barriers to use, and microbiological effectiveness of three prototype household water treatment technologies in Haiti, Kenya, and Nicaragua

The article discusses a study that was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of a ceramic water filter in reducing the concentration of bacteria and viruses in drinking water. The study was conducted in a rural community in Cambodia, where the ceramic filters were distributed to households.
Author(s): Murray, Anna L., Napotnik, Julie A., Rayner, Justine S., Mendoza, Antonia, Mitro, Brittany, Norville, Joshua, Faith, Sitnah H., Eleveld, Alie, Jellison, Kristen L., and Lantagne, Daniele S.
Published: 2020
Language: English
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Additional Information

Household water treatment (HWT) can improve drinking water quality and reduce diarrheal disease. New HWT technologies are typically evaluated under ideal conditions; however, health gains depend on consistent, effective household use, which is less often evaluated. We conducted four evaluations of three prototype HWT technologies: two filters and one electrochlorinator. Evaluations consisted of a baseline survey, HWT distribution to households (ranging from 60 to 82), and four visits (ranging from 1 week-14 months after distribution). Each visit included a survey, observation of treated water presence (confirmed use), and microbiological analysis of treated and untreated samples for E. coli. Consistent use was defined as the proportion of total visits with confirmed use. Overall, confirmed use declined 2.54% per month on average, and 2–72% of households demonstrated 100% consistent use. Consistent use was positively associated with baseline HWT knowledge and practice and belief that drinking water was unsafe, and negatively associated with technological problems. Reported barriers to use were behavioral, such as forgetting or when outside the home, and technological failures. Technologies demonstrated 68–96% E. coli reductions, with 18–70% of treated samples having detectable E. coli. Results highlight the importance of household use evaluations within prototype HWT technology design cycles, the need for standard evaluation metrics, and difficulties in achieving both consistent use and microbiological effectiveness with HWT technologies.