Community-Level Analysis of Drinking Water Data Highlights the Importance of Drinking Water Metrics for the State, Federal Environmental Health Justice Priorities in the United States

Research studies analyzing the geospatial distribution of air pollution and other types of environmental contamination documented the persistence of environmental health disparities between communities. Due to the shortage of publicly available data, only limited research has been published on the g...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2021-10, Vol.18 (19), p.10401
Hauptverfasser: Uche, Uloma Igara, Evans, Sydney, Rundquist, Soren, Campbell, Chris, Naidenko, Olga V.
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container_issue 19
container_start_page 10401
container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Uche, Uloma Igara
Evans, Sydney
Rundquist, Soren
Campbell, Chris
Naidenko, Olga V.
description Research studies analyzing the geospatial distribution of air pollution and other types of environmental contamination documented the persistence of environmental health disparities between communities. Due to the shortage of publicly available data, only limited research has been published on the geospatial distribution of drinking water pollution. Here we present a framework for the joint consideration of community-level drinking water data and demographic data. Our analysis builds on a comprehensive data set of drinking water contaminant occurrence for the United States for 2014–2019 and the American Community Survey 5-year estimates (2015–2019) from the U.S. Census Bureau. Focusing on the U.S. states of California and Texas for which geospatial data on community water system service boundaries are publicly available, we examine cumulative cancer risk for water served by community water systems of different sizes relative to demographic characteristics for the populations served by these water systems. In both California and Texas, greater cumulative cancer risk was observed for water systems serving communities with a higher percentage of Hispanic/Latino and Black/African American community members. This investigation demonstrates that it is both practical and essential to incorporate and expand the drinking water data metrics in the analysis of environmental pollution and environmental health. The framework presented here can support the development of public policies to advance environmental health justice priorities on state and federal levels in the U.S.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph181910401
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subjects Acids
Air pollution
Cancer
Case studies
Contaminants
Contamination
Datasets
Demographics
Drinking water
Environmental health
Health risks
Outdoor air quality
Population
Priorities
Public policy
Software
Spatial data
Water pollution
Water quality
title Community-Level Analysis of Drinking Water Data Highlights the Importance of Drinking Water Metrics for the State, Federal Environmental Health Justice Priorities in the United States
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