Exploring relevance, public perceptions, and business models for establishment of private well water quality monitoring service

Summary Existing public policies mostly focus on public water systems, leaving aside the quality issues regarding private wells in small and rural locations. Establishment of affordable and accessible water quality monitoring services may ensure acceptable levels of all the parameters. This paper ai...

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Veröffentlicht in:The International journal of health planning and management 2019-04, Vol.34 (2), p.e1098-e1118
Hauptverfasser: Thomson, Kalen K., Rahman, Arifur, Cooper, Tom J., Sarkar, Atanu
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container_issue 2
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container_title The International journal of health planning and management
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creator Thomson, Kalen K.
Rahman, Arifur
Cooper, Tom J.
Sarkar, Atanu
description Summary Existing public policies mostly focus on public water systems, leaving aside the quality issues regarding private wells in small and rural locations. Establishment of affordable and accessible water quality monitoring services may ensure acceptable levels of all the parameters. This paper aims to explore (a) health risk because of chemical contaminants of private wells, (b) population perspective on well water quality and monitoring, and (c) to create a business model of a centralized water quality monitoring service. The results show potential problems with toxic levels of arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, and selenium. About 5% of the province's population is at risk for potential exposure to contaminated private well water. The survey reinforces that the successful implementation of water testing laboratories for private wells is a shared responsibility between well owners and the government organizations, and almost three‐fourths respondents were willing to share the cost up to certain limit. A business model including financial projections for a centralized water testing laboratory is presented. Drinking of unmonitored private well water is putting population health at risk. Either strong regulation with mandatory water testing or voluntary water testing with adequate government subsidy can ensure sustainable function of a centralized water testing laboratory.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/hpm.2747
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; PAIS Index; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Arsenic
Barium
Business
Business model
Business models
Cadmium
Canada
Centralization
Chemical pollution
Chromium
Contaminants
Drinking water
Drinking Water - chemistry
Drinking Water - standards
Environmental Monitoring
Environmental regulations
Female
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health risks
Humans
Laboratories
Lead
Male
Mercury
Mercury (metal)
Middle Aged
Models, Organizational
Organic chemistry
Owners
Pollution monitoring
Private Sector
private well
Projections
Public Opinion
public perceptions
Public policy
Public waters
Respondents
Rural areas
Rural communities
Selenium
Surveys and Questionnaires
Testing laboratories
Water pollution
Water quality
Water Quality - standards
Water quality management
water quality monitoring
Water Wells
Waterworks
Well water
title Exploring relevance, public perceptions, and business models for establishment of private well water quality monitoring service
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