Relative benefits of on-plot water supply over other ‘improved’ sources in rural Vietnam

January 3, 2013 · 0 comments

Tropical Medicine & International Health, Volume 18, Issue 1, pages 65–74, January 2013

Relative benefits of on-plot water supply over other ‘improved’ sources in rural Vietnam

Joe Brown, et al

Objective – Access to improved water sources is rapidly expanding in rural central Vietnam. We examined one NGO-led piped water supply programme to assess the drinking water quality and health impacts of piped water systems where access to ‘improved’ water sources is already good.

Methods – This longitudinal, prospective cohort study followed 300 households in seven project areas in Da Nang province, Vietnam: 224 households who paid for an on-plot piped water connection and 76 control households from the same areas relying primarily on ‘improved’ water sources outside the home. The 4-month study was intended to measure the impact of the NGO-led water programmes on households’ drinking water quality and health and to evaluate system performance.

Results – We found that: (i) households connected to a piped water supply had consistently better drinking water quality than those relying on other sources, including ‘improved’ sources and (ii) connected households experienced less diarrhoea than households without a piped water connection (adjusted longitudinal prevalence ratio: 0.57 (95% CI 0.39–0.86, P = 0.006) and households using an ‘improved’ source not piped to the plot: (adjusted longitudinal prevalence ratio: 0.59 (95% CI 0.39–0.91, P = 0.018).

Conclusions – Our results suggest that on-plot water service yields benefits over other sources that are considered ‘improved’ by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme.

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