Microbiological Contamination of Drinking Water Associated with Household Practices in Rural Bangladesh

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ID: 283875
2025
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Abstract
The occurrence of contaminated water continues to be an essential public health focus in rural Bangladesh where the widespread presence of fecal contamination includes the dangerous bacterial species Escherichia coli (E. coli). The research examines how home practices affect microbiological water contamination throughout the drinking water collection process in rural Bangladesh. This research investigates household practices which affect contamination levels of drinking water through water collection methods and storage practices and treatment approaches while developing proof-based interventions for water quality improvement. The researchers conducted water sampling at different time points in sixty rural villages spread across the study population. They randomly selected fifty communities for their analysis. A laboratory examined E. coli concentrations because it serves as a critical marker of fecal contamination. The study shows open containers with untreated water storage produced higher amounts of contamination but boiling water in combination with using closed containers reduced the contamination levels substantially. Data collection demonstrates that public health outcomes improve when safe practices receive educational training and better water storage features are made accessible to the public. Generous recommendations focus on household water treatment technology promotion and community-based education as well as enhanced water supply infrastructure. Research needs to analyze sustained intervention strategies in addition to behavioral economics approaches for promoting protective practices and the effect that climate change has on water quality.
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Authors Sanghadeep S. Ukey, Dr. R. Kuralarasi, Dr S Balasingh, Jayasree Chinthapalli Shankar Reddy, Sneha Khadse
Journal International Journal of Integrative Studies
Year 2025
DOI
10.63856/
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