Post
Published on January 9, 2025
A new article has been authored by experts from the Dahdaleh Institute for Global Health Research and Médecins Sans Frontières in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, exploring factors that protect or compromise the safe water chain in refugee camps.
The paper presents a secondary analysis of water quality and water handling data we collected in refugee camps in South Sudan, Jordan, and Rwanda and uses statistical and process-based modeling to explore how water handling practices affect chlorine decay and household water safety outcomes. We find that the two practices that consistently increased chlorine decay and compromised household water safety were storing water in direct sunlight and transferring water between containers during household storage. These findings indicate that humanitarian responders should provide additional water storage containers to prevent water transferring in households and encourage water-users not to store water in direct sunlight, as both practices severely compromise the safe water chain.
While these two practices had strong, consistent effects, the effects of hygienic water handling practices including keeping containers clean, covered, and drawing by tap or pouring were mixed or inconclusive. This inconclusiveness may have emerged due to imbalances in the dataset or unreliability of subjective assessments of behavioural factors in the field. Given that hygienic water handling practices mechanistically provide a physical barrier against recontamination, they should always be promoted in refugee camps.
This study is, to our knowledge, the first to characterize and evaluate factors that protect or compromise the safe water chain in high-risk humanitarian settings and we hope will provide useful operational recommendations for humanitarian practitioners.
Ali, Syed Imran, De Santi, Michael, Monette, Georges, Khan, Usman T., Fesselet, J., & Orbinski, James (2024). Protecting the safe water chain in refugee camps: An exploratory study of water handling practices, chlorine decay, and household water safety in South Sudan, Jordan, and Rwanda. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.24-0221
Themes | Global Health & Humanitarianism |
Status | Active |
Related Work |
N/A
|
Updates |
N/A
|
People |
James Orbinski, Director [F17-F24] - Alum
Usman T. Khan, Faculty Fellow, Lassonde School of Engineering - Active Syed Imran Ali, Research Fellow, Global Health and Humanitarianism - Active Georges Monette, Faculty Fellow, Faculty of Science - Active Michael De Santi, Dahdaleh Global Health Graduate Scholar, Lassonde School of Engineering - Alum |
You may also be interested in...
The Climate Collective: York’s First Climate-Focused Student Club
The climate crisis is not just a scientific issue. It’s emotional, cultural, and personal. At York University, a new kind of student response is taking shape: The Climate Collective (TCC). Founded by students in the ...Read more about this Post
Recap – Individual Agency in the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases
In this November 9, 2022, Arun Chockalingam, professor and Dahdaleh senior fellow, analyzed the correlation between planetary health and human health. Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs) on the rise since the mid 1900s. Professor Chockalingam advised that ...Read more about this Post
CalmConnect: Retooling Y-MIND to Treat Anxiety Among Black Immigrant Youth in Toronto, Canada
In 2022, 1 in 4 youth in Canada had been diagnosed with a mental illness. Black immigrant (born abroad) youth in Canada are particularly at an increased risk of poor mental health such as anxiety ...Read more about this Project
