Assessing the Influence of Water Management and Rainfall Seasonality on Water Quality and Intestinal Parasitism in Rural Northeastern Brazil

Author:

Dias Alexandre Pessoa12ORCID,Calegar Deiviane3ORCID,Carvalho-Costa Filipe Anibal34,Alencar Maria de Fátima Leal1,Ignacio Caroline Ferraz1,Silva Milena Enderson Chagas da1,Moraes Neto Antonio Henrique Almeida de1

Affiliation:

1. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Laboratório de Inovações em Terapias, Ensino e Bioprodutos (LITEB), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

2. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Escola Politécnica de Saúde Joaquim Venâncio, Laboratório de Educação Profissional em Vigilância em Saúde (LAVSA), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

3. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Laboratório de Epidemiologia e Sistemática Molecular (LESM), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

4. Escritório Técnico Regional Fiocruz Piauí, Brazil

Abstract

Introduction. The drought in the Brazilian semiarid region has affected the quality of water. This study assessed the relationships between enteric parasitoses, water management, and water quality, correlating them with pluviometric seasonality.Methods. Cross-sectional surveys were carried out in four rural communities at the beginning of the dry season (n=151), at the end of the dry season (n=184), and in the rainy season (n=199), in order to collect sociodemographic data, human fecal samples, and samples of the water used for human consumption for physicochemical and microbiological analyses. In 2015, water filters were provided to 30 households under study.Results. There was an increasing trend in detection rates of commensal protozoa and theEntamoeba histolytica/Entamoeba disparcomplex at the beginning of the rainy season, with detection rates of 6% in 2014 and 21.6% in 2016.Giardia intestinalisandAscaris lumbricoidespresented distinct temporal distributions, which peaked in 2015: 20.1% and 30%, respectively. The proportion of inhabitants drinking inadequate water was 55% at the beginning of the dry season and 28.8% at the end of the dry season, reaching 70.9% at the beginning of the rainy season. The presence of filters reduced this proportion among those who received the hollow ceramic candle filter.Conclusions. Data suggest that the strategies to increase water supply in the Brazilian semiarid region can be ameliorated in order to improve the quality of drinking water.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Medicine,Microbiology,Parasitology

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