Jensen Peter Kjær Mackie, Hossain Zenat Zebin, Ferdous Jannatul, Sultana Rebeca, Almeida Sara, Koch Ellen Bjerre, Begum Anowara
Copenhagen Center for Disaster Research, Section for Global Health, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Microbiology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2022 Feb 7;106(4):1163-1169. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.20-1530. Print 2022 Apr 6.
The minimal health impact observed in large-scale water sanitation and hygiene (WASH) intervention studies motivated us to investigate the contribution of contaminated food and drinking water to the total daily Escherichia coli load ingested by the average adult in a low-income, urban area. Leftover food (food left at room temperature for more than 6 hours) from 32 households was collected eight times at 6-week intervals in 2014-2015 in the low-income area of Arichpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh. In total, 117 samples were obtained from four food types: fish, lentils, rice, and vegetables, which comprise approximately 85.2% of the average adult's personal daily food consumption. Samples were analyzed for E. coli using selective chromogenic media. For an average adult, the daily consumption of the four food types at mean contamination levels of E. coli can contribute 4.45 log colony-forming units (cfu)/day (95% confidence interval 4.06-4.84). Drinking water quality was measured 211 times at the point of drinking, with a mean, median, and maximum contamination of 1.9, 1.2, and 2.82 log E. coli cfu/100 mL, respectively. If the typical adult in Arichpur was able to drink water with 0 E. coli cfu/100 mL, it would only remove < 5.2% of the total E. coli ingested per day with a mean-contaminated diet. These approximations may suggest why insignificant effects have been observed for water quality interventions in similar, low-hygiene settings. In Arichpur, the E. coli contribution from drinking water to the total E. coli load was insufficient to exert a substantial effect.
在大规模水卫生与环境卫生(WASH)干预研究中观察到的对健康的最小影响,促使我们去调查在低收入城市地区,受污染的食物和饮用水对普通成年人每日摄入的大肠杆菌总量的贡献。2014年至2015年期间,在孟加拉国达卡阿里布尔的低收入地区,每隔6周从32户家庭收集一次剩饭(在室温下放置超过6小时的食物),共收集了8次。总共从四种食物类型中获取了117个样本:鱼、扁豆、米饭和蔬菜,这些食物约占普通成年人个人每日食物摄入量的85.2%。使用选择性显色培养基对样本进行大肠杆菌分析。对于普通成年人来说,四种食物类型在大肠杆菌平均污染水平下的每日摄入量可贡献4.45个对数菌落形成单位(cfu)/天(95%置信区间4.06 - 4.84)。在饮用水点对水质进行了211次测量,大肠杆菌污染的平均值、中位数和最大值分别为1.9、1.2和2.82个对数cfu/100 mL。如果阿里布尔的典型成年人能够饮用每100 mL含0个大肠杆菌cfu的水,那么这只会使平均污染饮食情况下每日摄入的大肠杆菌总量减少不到5.2%。这些近似值可能说明了为什么在类似的低卫生条件环境中,水质干预措施的效果不显著。在阿里布尔,饮用水中大肠杆菌对总大肠杆菌负荷的贡献不足以产生实质性影响。