Quantification of Exposure to Fecal Contamination in Open Drains in Four Neighborhoods in Accra, Ghana

Quantification of Exposure to Fecal Contamination in Open Drains in Four Neighborhoods in Accra, Ghana

Published: Apr 30, 2016
Publisher: Journal of Water and Health, vol. 14, no. 2
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Authors

Stephanie R. Gretsch

Joseph A. Ampofo

Kelly K. Baker

Julie Clennon

Clair A. Null

Dorothy Peprah

Heather Reese

Katharine Robb

Peter Teunis

Nii Wellington

Habib Yakubu

Christine L. Moe

In low-income countries, rapid urbanization adds pressure to already stressed water and sanitation systems that are critical to the health of communities. Drainage networks, designed for stormwater but commonly used for disposing of waste, are rarely covered completely, allowing residents to easily come into contact with their contents. This study used spatial mapping, documentation of physical drain characteristics, microbiological analysis of drain samples, and behavioral observation to comprehensively examine drains as a route of exposure to fecal contamination in four low-income neighborhoods in Accra, Ghana. A stochastic model of six likely exposure scenarios was constructed to estimate children's exposure to drain water. Regardless of the age of the child, any exposure scenario considered resulted in exposure to a high level of fecal contamination. Fecal contamination levels in drains were high (Escherichia coli: geometric mean (GM), 8.60 cfu log10/100 mL; coliphage: GM, 5.56 pfu log10/100 mL), and did not differ by neighborhood or physical drain characteristics, indicating that frequency of contact with drains, and not drain type or location, drives exposure risk. To mitigate health risks associated with this exposure, drains should be covered, with priority given to large concrete and small to medium dirt-lined drains that children were most commonly observed entering.

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