A review of household drinking water intervention trials and an approach to the estimation of endemic waterborne gastroenteritis in the United States.

The incidence of acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) attributable to public drinking water systems in the United States cannot be directly measured but must be estimated based on epidemiologic studies and other information. The randomized trial is one study design used to evaluate risks attributable to drinking water. In this paper, we review all published randomized trials of drinking water interventions in industrialized countries conducted among general immunocompetent populations. We then present an approach to estimating the incidence (number of cases) of AGI attributable annually to drinking water. To develop a national estimate, we integrate trial results with the estimated incidence of AGI using necessary assumptions about the estimated number of residents consuming different sources of drinking water and the relative quality of the water sources under different scenarios. Using this approach we estimate there to be 4.26-11.69 million cases of AGI annually attributable to public drinking water systems in the United States. We believe this preliminary estimate should be updated as new data become available.

[1]  Michèle Prévost,et al.  A prospective epidemiological study of gastrointestinal health effects due to the consumption of drinking water , 1997 .

[2]  M. Sinclair,et al.  A randomized, blinded, controlled trial investigating the gastrointestinal health effects of drinking water quality. , 2001, Environmental health perspectives.

[3]  M. Beach,et al.  The rate of acute gastrointestinal illness in developed countries. , 2006, Journal of water and health.

[4]  Michael J Beach,et al.  Waterborne outbreaks reported in the United States. , 2006, Journal of water and health.

[5]  J. Rees,et al.  Participant Blinding and Gastrointestinal Illness in a Randomized, Controlled Trial of an In-Home Drinking Water Intervention , 2002, Emerging infectious diseases.

[6]  G. Craun,et al.  Assessing waterborne risks: an introduction. , 2006, Journal of water and health.

[7]  M. J. van der Laan,et al.  A randomized, controlled trial of in-home drinking water intervention to reduce gastrointestinal illness. , 2005, American journal of epidemiology.

[8]  M. Edwardes,et al.  A randomized trial to evaluate the risk of gastrointestinal disease due to consumption of drinking water meeting current microbiological standards. , 1991, American journal of public health.

[9]  K E James,et al.  An index for assessing blindness in a multi-centre clinical trial: disulfiram for alcohol cessation--a VA cooperative study. , 1996, Statistics in medicine.

[10]  A. Cronquist,et al.  A population-based estimate of the substantial burden of diarrhoeal disease in the United States; FoodNet, 1996–2003 , 2006, Epidemiology and Infection.

[11]  M. Lechevallier,et al.  Did a severe flood in the Midwest cause an increase in the incidence of gastrointestinal symptoms? , 2004, American journal of epidemiology.

[12]  J. Hadler,et al.  A population-based estimate of the burden of diarrhoeal illness in the United States: FoodNet, 1996–7 , 2002, Epidemiology and Infection.

[13]  J. Hadler,et al.  Burden of self-reported acute diarrheal illness in FoodNet surveillance areas, 1998-1999. , 2004, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.