Evidence for long-term efficacy of a membrane filtration device in rural villages in Ghana

Drinking water contaminated by pathogenic micro-organisms increases the risk of infectious gastrointestinal disease which could potentially lead to acute kidney injury and even death, particularly amongst the young and the elderly. Earlier studies have shown a substantial reduction in the incidence...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2024-03, Vol.14 (1), p.5271-5271, Article 5271
Hauptverfasser: Boaheng, Joseph Marfo, Raimann, Jochen G., Narh, Philip, Johnson, Seth, Donald, Linda L., Mati, Harrison Kwame, Port, Friedrich K., Levin, Nathan W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Drinking water contaminated by pathogenic micro-organisms increases the risk of infectious gastrointestinal disease which could potentially lead to acute kidney injury and even death, particularly amongst the young and the elderly. Earlier studies have shown a substantial reduction in the incidence of diarrheal disease over a period of one year using a polysulfone membrane water gravity-powered water filtration device. The current report is a continuation of these studies to assess the long-term effects of the innovative method on diarrheal incidence rates over a 4-year follow-up period. This follow-up study monitored the trend of self-reported diarrheal events in all households in the previously studied villages for 5 months, in the last half of each study year, using the same questionnaire utilized in the earlier study. Three villages that had no device yet installed served as controls. We computed monthly diarrheal incidence rates for all study years (standardized to per 100 person-months) and compared these to the pre-device incidence rate in 2018 and in the control group, using the Wilcoxon rank sum exact test. The average diarrheal incidence rates of 1.5 p100pm in 2019, 2.19 p100pm in 2021, and 0.54p100pm in 2022 were significantly different from an earlier study that reported 17.8 p100pm rates before the devices were installed in 2018, (all p-values 
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-024-55977-8