Promotion of well-switching to mitigate the current arsenic crisis in Bangladesh

Bull World Health Organ. 2002;80(9):732-7.

Abstract

Objective: To survey tube wells and households in Araihazar upazila, Bangladesh, to set the stage for a long-term epidemiological study of the consequences of chronic arsenic exposure.

Methods: Water samples and household data were collected over a period of 4 months in 2000 from 4997 contiguous tube wells serving a population of 55000, the position of each well being determined to within +/- 30 m using Global Positioning System receivers. Arsenic concentrations were determined by graphite-furnace atomic-absorption spectrometry. In addition, groundwater samples collected every 2 weeks for an entire year from six tube wells were analysed for arsenic by high-resolution inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry.

Findings: Half of the wells surveyed in Araihazar had been installed in the previous 5 years; 94% were privately owned. Only about 48% of the surveyed wells supplied water with an arsenic content below 50 micro g/l, the current Bangladesh standard for drinking-water. Similar to other regions of Bangladesh and West Bengal, India, the distribution of arsenic in Araihazar is spatially highly variable (range: 5-860 micro g/l) and therefore difficult to predict. Because of this variability, however, close to 90% of the inhabitants live within 100 m of a safe well. Monitoring of six tube wells currently meeting the 50 micro g/l standard showed no indication of a seasonal cycle in arsenic concentrations coupled to the hydrological cycle. This suggests that well-switching is a viable option in Araihazar, at least for the short term.

Conclusions: Well-switching should be more systematically encouraged in Araihazar and many other parts of Bangladesh and West Bengal, India. Social barriers to well-switching need to be better understood and, if possible, overcome.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Arsenic / analysis*
  • Arsenic Poisoning / epidemiology
  • Arsenic Poisoning / prevention & control
  • Bangladesh / epidemiology
  • Environmental Exposure / analysis*
  • Humans
  • Spectrophotometry, Atomic
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical / analysis*
  • Water Supply / analysis*

Substances

  • Water Pollutants, Chemical
  • Arsenic