Zheng Yan, Flanagan Sara V
School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology , Shenzhen, China.
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University , Palisades, New York, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2017 Aug 3;125(8):085002. doi: 10.1289/EHP629.
The 1974 Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) regulates >170,000 public water systems to protect health, but not >13 million private wells. State and local government requirements for private well water testing are rare and inconsistent; the responsibility to ensure water safety remains with individual households. Over the last two decades, geogenic arsenic has emerged as a significant public health concern due to high prevalence in many rural American communities.
We build the case for universal screening of private well water quality around arsenic, the most toxic and widespread of common private water contaminants. We argue that achieving universal screening will require policy intervention, and that testing should be made easy, accessible, and in many cases free to all private well households in the United States, considering the invisible, tasteless, odorless, and thus silent nature of arsenic.
Our research has identified behavioral, situational and financial barriers to households managing their own well water safety, resulting in far from universal screening despite traditional public health outreach efforts. We observe significant socioeconomic disparities in arsenic testing and treatment when private water is unregulated. Testing requirements can be a partial answer to these challenges.
Universal screening, achieved through local testing requirements complemented by greater community engagement targeting biologically and socioeconomically vulnerable groups, would reduce population arsenic exposure greater than any promotional efforts to date. Universal screening of private well water will identify the dangers hidden in America's drinking water supply and redirect attention to ensure safe water among affected households. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP629.
1974年的《安全饮用水法》(SDWA)对超过17万个公共供水系统进行监管以保护公众健康,但未涵盖1300多万口水井。州和地方政府对私人井水检测的要求很少且不一致;确保用水安全的责任仍由各家庭承担。在过去二十年中,由于在美国许多农村社区中普遍存在,地质成因的砷已成为一个重大的公共卫生问题。
我们为围绕砷对私人井水水质进行普遍筛查提供依据,砷是常见的私人用水污染物中毒性最强且分布最广的。我们认为,要实现普遍筛查需要政策干预,并且考虑到砷无形、无味、无臭因而悄无声息的特性,检测应做到简便、可及,且在许多情况下对美国所有拥有私人水井的家庭免费。
我们的研究发现了家庭在管理自身井水安全方面存在行为、环境和经济障碍,这导致尽管进行了传统的公共卫生宣传工作,但远未实现普遍筛查。我们观察到,在私人用水缺乏监管时,砷检测和处理方面存在显著的社会经济差异。检测要求可能是应对这些挑战的部分答案。
通过地方检测要求并辅以针对生物和社会经济弱势群体的更多社区参与来实现普遍筛查,将比迄今为止的任何宣传努力都能更大程度地减少人群砷暴露。对私人井水进行普遍筛查将发现隐藏在美国饮用水供应中的危险,并将注意力重新引导至确保受影响家庭的用水安全。https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP629