Ford Lorelei, Bharadwaj Lalita, McLeod Lianne, Waldner Cheryl
School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Saskatchewan, 117 Science Place, Saskatoon SK S7N 5C8, Canada.
School of Public Health, University of Saskatchewan, 107 Wiggins Road, Saskatoon SK S7N 2Z4, Canada.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2017 Jul 28;14(8):846. doi: 10.3390/ijerph14080846.
Safe drinking water is a global challenge for rural populations dependent on unregulated water. A scoping review of research on human health risk assessments (HHRA) applied to this vulnerable population may be used to improve assessments applied by government and researchers. This review aims to summarize and describe the characteristics of HHRA methods, publications, and current literature gaps of HHRA studies on rural populations dependent on unregulated or unspecified drinking water. Peer-reviewed literature was systematically searched (January 2000 to May 2014) and identified at least one drinking water source as unregulated (21%) or unspecified (79%) in 100 studies. Only 7% of reviewed studies identified a rural community dependent on unregulated drinking water. Source water and hazards most frequently cited included groundwater (67%) and chemical water hazards (82%). Most HHRAs (86%) applied deterministic methods with 14% reporting probabilistic and stochastic methods. Publications increased over time with 57% set in Asia, and 47% of studies identified at least one literature gap in the areas of research, risk management, and community exposure. HHRAs applied to rural populations dependent on unregulated water are poorly represented in the literature even though almost half of the global population is rural.
对于依赖未经监管的水源的农村人口而言,安全饮用水是一项全球性挑战。对适用于这一弱势群体的人类健康风险评估(HHRA)研究进行范围综述,或许可用于改进政府和研究人员所开展的评估。本综述旨在总结和描述HHRA方法的特点、相关出版物,以及针对依赖未经监管或未明确说明的饮用水的农村人口开展的HHRA研究当前存在的文献空白。对同行评审文献进行了系统检索(2000年1月至2014年5月),在100项研究中,至少有一项饮用水源被认定为未经监管(21%)或未明确说明(79%)。在经过评审的研究中,仅有7%的研究确定了一个依赖未经监管的饮用水的农村社区。最常被提及的水源和危害包括地下水(67%)和化学性水危害(82%)。大多数HHRA(86%)采用确定性方法,14%的研究报告采用概率性和随机性方法。出版物数量随时间增加,其中57%的研究以亚洲为背景,47%的研究在研究、风险管理和社区暴露等领域确定了至少一个文献空白。尽管全球近一半人口为农村人口,但文献中针对依赖未经监管的水的农村人口开展的HHRA研究却很少。