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Observations placeholder

Contamination of American drinking water with arsenic

Identifier

008327

Type of Spiritual Experience

None

Background

No spiritual experience but important background information

A description of the experience

Sci Total Environ. 2014 May 26. pii: S0048-9697(14)00675-5. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.05.017. [Epub ahead of print]  Influences on domestic well water testing behavior in a Central Maine area with frequent groundwater arsenic occurrence.  Flanagan SV1, Marvinney RG2, Zheng Y3.

In 2001 the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) adopted a new standard for arsenic (As) in drinking water of 10μg/L, replacing the old standard of 50μg/L. However, for the 12% of the U.S. population relying on unregulated domestic well water, including half of the population of Maine, it is solely the well owner's responsibility to test and treat the water.

A mailed household survey was implemented in January 2013 in 13 towns of Central Maine with the goal of understanding the population's testing and treatment practices and the key behavior influencing factors in an area with high well-water dependency and frequent natural groundwater As.

The response rate was 58.3%; 525 of 900 likely-delivered surveys to randomly selected addresses were completed. Although 78% of the households reported that their well has been tested, half of it was more than 5years ago. Among the 58.7% who believe they have tested for As, most do not remember the results. Better educated, higher income homeowners who more recently purchased their homes are most likely to have included As when last testing.

While households agree that water and As-related health risks can be severe, they feel low personal vulnerability and there are low testing norms overall. Significant predictors of including As when last testing include: having knowledge that years of exposure increases As-related health risks (risk knowledge), knowing who to contact to test well water (action knowledge), believing that regular testing does not take too much time (instrumental attitude), and having neighbors who regularly test their water (descriptive norm).

Homeowners in As-affected communities have the tendency to underestimate their As risks compared to their neighbors. The reasons for this optimistic bias require further study, but low testing behaviors in this area may be due to the influence of a combination of norm, ability, and attitude factors and barriers.

KEYWORDS:

Arsenic; Drinking water; Health behavior; Maine; Private well; Well testing

PMID:  24875279

The source of the experience

PubMed

Concepts, symbols and science items

Concepts

Symbols

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

Activities

Suppressions

Arsenic
Water

Commonsteps

References