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Severity of waterborne diseases in developing countries and the effectiveness of ceramic filters for improving water quality

Bulletin of the National Research Centre/Bulletin of the National Research Center 2023 115 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Godfrey Michael Shayo, Elianaso Elimbinzi, Godlisten N. Shao, Christina Fabian

Summary

This review evaluates strategies used in developing countries to combat waterborne diseases, with a focus on ceramic water filters as an affordable purification method. Ceramic filters can effectively remove bacteria, viruses, and chemical contaminants including microplastics from drinking water. With billions of people lacking access to clean water, low-cost filtration methods that also remove emerging contaminants like microplastics are critical for protecting public health.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Background It is anticipated that three (3) billion people will experience water stress by 2025 due to limited access to clean water. Water-related diseases and fatalities affect both industrialized and developing countries. Waterborne diseases are challenging worldwide, especially in developing countries. This article evaluates strategies used by various countries, particularly developing countries, to combat waterborne diseases. These strategies have been largely successful in reducing the prevalence of water-related diseases in developing countries. Main body of the abstract The effectiveness of these strategies is evaluated in terms of their ability to remove water contaminants such as bacteria, viruses, and chemicals. Different strategies can be used, including traditional water treatment techniques such as boiling, chlorination, flocculation, solar disinfection and ceramic-based water filtration systems. These methods can help improve water quality and safety. The choice of strategy depends on the specific contaminants in the water and the desired outcome. Proper implementation of these strategies is key to ensuring safe drinking water. Short conclusion It was revealed that in developing countries, multiple water treatment techniques are used. This has led to the reduction in waterborne diseases from 50 to 90%. Ceramic-based water purification systems are reportedly the modern and least expensive technique, since they are highly efficient and can be made locally. Thus, ceramic water filtration systems are widely used due to their affordability and easy maintenance.

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