WHO Hopes Clean Water
Guide Helps Prevent Disease
The World Health Organization issued
new guidelines on preventing contamination of drinking water supplies
and resultant illnesses.
Only 50 percent of the world's
population has access to running water at home, with the rest
relying on wells or rivers, according to the WHO.
The U.N. agency's updated guidelines
aim to help authorities improve water quality from the source
to the tap or rural well.
"No country, not even a developed
country, is immune to problems related to water quality. All regulatory
authorities must remain constantly vigilant ...," WHO's Jose Hueb
told a news briefing.
The guidelines include instructions
on ensuring reservoirs or wells avoid the risk of contamination
from human and animal waste, as well as basic advice like regular
changing of water filters.
The new guide follows the discovery
in Bangladesh that water delivered by tube-wells is laced with
high levels of naturally occurring arsenic -- putting the health
of millions at risk -- and recent cases of water-borne bacteria
in Canada and in the U.S. state of Ohio.
The guide includes advice on handling
humanitarian crises such as in Darfur in western Sudan, where
a hepatitis epidemic due to poor sanitation has struck 4,524 people,
killing 73. Another 1,292 cases and 42 deaths have been reported
among refugees in eastern Chad who fled the violence in Darfur.
Reference
Source 89
Posted
September 22, 2004
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