A field survey was conducted in Bindura district of Zimbabwe in January 2012 to evaluate the perceptions and practices of rural households on biosand filters after two years of use. A questionnaire was administered to 33 sampled households during an unannounced visit to solicit information on demography, use of biosand filters and safe water storage. A field kit (Oxfam delAgua) was used to estimate faecal coliforms in 83 water samples drawn from the household source (17), filter-spout (33) and storage vessel (33). Results indicate that biosand filters were structurally intact and operational with a mean treatment efficiency of 95.9±1.4% (n=33) suggesting a high sustained use. Households (n=33) expressed great satisfaction with the use of biosand filters as they got adequate drinking water (90.9%). Households cited improved health (100%), clean water (100%); good taste (100%) and ease of use (90.9%) as perceived benefits of using the biosand filter. The mean faecal coliform level of biosand filter-treated water (3.2±1.4cfu/100ml) was significantly lower than that of source water (37.1±8.9cfu/100ml) (p<0.05). Biosand filters (78.8%) provided safe drinking water (0cfu/100ml) but were recontaminated (26.9%, n=26) during storage. Poor household hygiene, unrecommended storage methods and withdrawal practices were attributed to recontamination of stored treated water.
Published in | International Journal of Science, Technology and Society (Volume 2, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11 |
Page(s) | 1-5 |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2014. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Biosand Filter, Household Water Treatment, Safe Water Storage, User Perceptions
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APA Style
KANDA Artwell, GOTOSA Jephita, MASAMHA Blessing, NYAMADZAWO George, MISI Shepherd Norman. (2014). Practices and Perceptions of Biosand Filter Users in Treating Drinking Water in a Rural District of Zimbabwe. International Journal of Science, Technology and Society, 2(1), 1-5. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11
ACS Style
KANDA Artwell; GOTOSA Jephita; MASAMHA Blessing; NYAMADZAWO George; MISI Shepherd Norman. Practices and Perceptions of Biosand Filter Users in Treating Drinking Water in a Rural District of Zimbabwe. Int. J. Sci. Technol. Soc. 2014, 2(1), 1-5. doi: 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11
AMA Style
KANDA Artwell, GOTOSA Jephita, MASAMHA Blessing, NYAMADZAWO George, MISI Shepherd Norman. Practices and Perceptions of Biosand Filter Users in Treating Drinking Water in a Rural District of Zimbabwe. Int J Sci Technol Soc. 2014;2(1):1-5. doi: 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11
@article{10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11, author = {KANDA Artwell and GOTOSA Jephita and MASAMHA Blessing and NYAMADZAWO George and MISI Shepherd Norman}, title = {Practices and Perceptions of Biosand Filter Users in Treating Drinking Water in a Rural District of Zimbabwe}, journal = {International Journal of Science, Technology and Society}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1-5}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijsts.20140201.11}, abstract = {A field survey was conducted in Bindura district of Zimbabwe in January 2012 to evaluate the perceptions and practices of rural households on biosand filters after two years of use. A questionnaire was administered to 33 sampled households during an unannounced visit to solicit information on demography, use of biosand filters and safe water storage. A field kit (Oxfam delAgua) was used to estimate faecal coliforms in 83 water samples drawn from the household source (17), filter-spout (33) and storage vessel (33). Results indicate that biosand filters were structurally intact and operational with a mean treatment efficiency of 95.9±1.4% (n=33) suggesting a high sustained use. Households (n=33) expressed great satisfaction with the use of biosand filters as they got adequate drinking water (90.9%). Households cited improved health (100%), clean water (100%); good taste (100%) and ease of use (90.9%) as perceived benefits of using the biosand filter. The mean faecal coliform level of biosand filter-treated water (3.2±1.4cfu/100ml) was significantly lower than that of source water (37.1±8.9cfu/100ml) (p<0.05). Biosand filters (78.8%) provided safe drinking water (0cfu/100ml) but were recontaminated (26.9%, n=26) during storage. Poor household hygiene, unrecommended storage methods and withdrawal practices were attributed to recontamination of stored treated water.}, year = {2014} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Practices and Perceptions of Biosand Filter Users in Treating Drinking Water in a Rural District of Zimbabwe AU - KANDA Artwell AU - GOTOSA Jephita AU - MASAMHA Blessing AU - NYAMADZAWO George AU - MISI Shepherd Norman Y1 - 2014/01/10 PY - 2014 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11 DO - 10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11 T2 - International Journal of Science, Technology and Society JF - International Journal of Science, Technology and Society JO - International Journal of Science, Technology and Society SP - 1 EP - 5 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-7420 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.20140201.11 AB - A field survey was conducted in Bindura district of Zimbabwe in January 2012 to evaluate the perceptions and practices of rural households on biosand filters after two years of use. A questionnaire was administered to 33 sampled households during an unannounced visit to solicit information on demography, use of biosand filters and safe water storage. A field kit (Oxfam delAgua) was used to estimate faecal coliforms in 83 water samples drawn from the household source (17), filter-spout (33) and storage vessel (33). Results indicate that biosand filters were structurally intact and operational with a mean treatment efficiency of 95.9±1.4% (n=33) suggesting a high sustained use. Households (n=33) expressed great satisfaction with the use of biosand filters as they got adequate drinking water (90.9%). Households cited improved health (100%), clean water (100%); good taste (100%) and ease of use (90.9%) as perceived benefits of using the biosand filter. The mean faecal coliform level of biosand filter-treated water (3.2±1.4cfu/100ml) was significantly lower than that of source water (37.1±8.9cfu/100ml) (p<0.05). Biosand filters (78.8%) provided safe drinking water (0cfu/100ml) but were recontaminated (26.9%, n=26) during storage. Poor household hygiene, unrecommended storage methods and withdrawal practices were attributed to recontamination of stored treated water. VL - 2 IS - 1 ER -