posted on 2018-02-12, 15:08authored byAndreas G. Koestler
Beside the fact that a huge effort still is needed to provide
safe drinking water at community and family level, there
are many different ways to make safe drinking water
available and affordable for family use in low-cost countries
and emergencies. Chlorination is the most common
practice both for providing safe water at large-scale schemes
for villages or urban settlements by batch treatment and for
families by disinfecting the collected water with tablets.
This way of providing safe water has many advantages
mainly because it makes the water safe also during carrying
it home and handling it at family place. The provision of
safe water relies on the proper dosing of chlorine and the
availability of chlorine in the respective form, such as
powder, tablets, liquid gas, etc. However, chlorination has
also been difficult to introduce due to the changes in water
taste, which has often made the population to go back to
non-treated traditional sources. Usually, an effort is needed
in health education to make a community to accept and to
welcome chlorinated water as a safer drinking water supply.
In conclusion from many water projects, it can be said
that the taste change of the drinking water is an underestimated
obstacle in improving the health of a population by
providing treated water.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Research Unit
Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC)
Published in
WEDC Conference
Citation
KOESTLER, A.G., 2002. Micro-filtration - a way to improve family health. IN: Reed, B. (ed). Sustainable environmental sanitation and water services: Proceedings of the 28th WEDC International Conference, Kolkata (Calcutta), India, 18-22 November 2002, 3p.p.
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