A UNC Water Institute study on the public health performance of sanitation technologies

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Re: A UNC Water Institute study on the public health performance of sanitation technologies

Thanks Dan for posting this very important paper.
It scientifically points to the need of managing effluent from septic tanks and other OSS.  This will be an important missing peice even as India has been witnessing a thrust on building faecal sludge treatment facilities. 

I was curious if the quality of groundwater and surface water was also assessed and how could impact of unmanaged effluent on their quality be modelled?

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paresh
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A UNC Water Institute study on the public health performance of sanitation technologies

Dear Colleagues:

Below is a link to a recent study that was co-authored by UNC Water Institute staff:

Public health performance of sanitation technologies in Tamil Nadu, India: Initial perspectives based on E. coli releaseInternational Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health, June 2022. Musa Manga, Pete Kolsky, Jan Willem Rosenboom, Sudha Ramalingam, Lavanya Sriramajayam, Jamie Bartram, Jill Stewart 

We investigated the feasibility of performance measurement of different sanitation technologies in Tamil Nadu, India in reducing the release of the pathogen indicator Escherichia coli (E. coli). After conducting users’ surveys and technical assessments of the locally prevalent sanitation systems, we classified them into 7 distinct categories (based on both observed physical characteristic and usage) within a widely-accepted physical typology. Faecal sludge and wastewater samples were collected and analysed for E. coli and total solids from 136 household systems, 24 community systems, and 23 sanitary sewer oveflows.

We estimated the average volumetric release rates of wastewater and faecal sludge from the different sanitation technologies. Average daily per capita E. coli release was computed, and used as one indicator of the public health performance of technologies. We found that on-site installations described by owners as “septic systems” included diverse forms of tanks and pits of uncertain performance. We observed a statistically significant difference in the average daily per capita E. coli release from different sanitation technologies (p = 0.00001).

Pathogen release from the studied on-site sanitation technologies varied by as much as 5 orders of magnitude from “lined pits” (5.4 Log10 E. coli per person per day) to “overflowing sanitary sewers” and “direct discharge pipes” (10.3–10.5 Log10 E. coli per person per day). Other technologies lay between these extremes, and their performances in E. coli removal also varied significantly, in both statistical and practical terms.

Our results suggest that although faecal sludge management along the sanitation service chain is important, sanitation planners of the observed systems (and probably elsewhere) should direct higher priority to proper management of the liquid effluents from these systems to minimize public health hazards.

We conclude that (i) the work demonstrates a new and promising approach for estimating the public health performance of differing sanitation technologies, (ii) if E.coli is accepted as an indicator of the public health hazard of releases from sanitation systems, our results strongly suggest that safe containment of excreta for an extended period substantially reduces pathogen numbers and the risk of pathogen release into the environment; and (iii) there are some simple but little-used technical improvements to design and construction of on-site sanitation systems which could significantly reduce the release of pathogens to the environment.
Dan Campbell,
Communications/KM Specialist
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