The effect of water quality testing on household behavior: evidence from an experiment in rural India.

How does specific information about contamination in a household's drinking water affect water handling behavior? We randomly split a sample of households in rural Andhra Pradesh, India. The treatment group observed a contamination test of the drinking water in their own household storage vessel; while they were waiting for their results, they were also provided with a list of actions that they could take to remedy contamination if they tested positive. The control group received no test or guidance. The drinking water of nearly 90% of tested households showed evidence of contamination by fecal bacteria. They reacted by purchasing more of their water from commercial sources but not by making more time-intensive adjustments. Providing salient evidence of risk increases demand for commercial clean water.

[1]  A. D. Benetti,et al.  Preventing disease through healthy environments: towards an estimate of the environmental burden of disease , 2007 .

[2]  Bright Lines, Risk Beliefs, and Risk Avoidance: Evidence from a Randomized Intervention in Bangladesh , 2010 .

[3]  A. An,et al.  Preventing disease through healthy environments , 2013 .

[4]  K. Gopal,et al.  Efficiency of Modified H2S Test for Detection of Faecal Contamination in Water , 2005, Environmental monitoring and assessment.

[5]  Jennifer Davis,et al.  The effects of informational interventions on household water management, hygiene behaviors, stored drinking water quality, and hand contamination in peri-urban Tanzania. , 2011, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[6]  W. Mcguire Public communication as a strategy for inducing health-promoting behavioral change. , 1984, Preventive medicine.

[7]  David I. Levine,et al.  Information and Persuasion: Achieving Safe Water Behaviors in Kenya , 2011 .

[8]  F. Parvez,et al.  Reduction in Urinary Arsenic Levels in Response to Arsenic Mitigation Efforts in Araihazar, Bangladesh , 2007, Environmental health perspectives.

[9]  E. Somanathan Effects of Information on Environmental Quality in Developing Countries , 2010, Review of Environmental Economics and Policy.

[10]  Jonathan Zinman,et al.  Being surveyed can change later behavior and related parameter estimates , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[11]  K S Manja,et al.  A simple field test for the detection of faecal pollution in drinking water. , 1982, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[12]  V. Curtis,et al.  Health in our hands, but not in our heads: understanding hygiene motivation in Ghana. , 2007, Health policy and planning.

[13]  Alexander van Geen,et al.  Can information alone change behavior? Response to arsenic contamination of groundwater in Bangladesh , 2007 .

[14]  Alexander Pfaff,et al.  Behavior, Environment, and Health in Developing Countries: Evaluation and Valuation , 2009 .

[15]  E. Somanathan,et al.  The importance of being informed: Experimental evidence on demand for environmental quality , 2008 .