Hand-to-Mouth
Contacts Result in Greater Ingestion
of Feces than Dietary Water Consumption in Tanzania: A Quantitative
Fecal Exposure Assessment Model
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Abstract
Diarrheal
diseases kill 1800 children under the age of five die
each day, and nearly half of these deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa.
Contaminated drinking water and hands are two important environmental
transmission routes of diarrhea-causing pathogens to young children
in low-income countries. The objective of this research is to evaluate
the relative contribution of these two major exposure pathways in
a low-income country setting. A Monte Carlo simulation was used to
model the amount of human feces ingested by children under five years
old from exposure via hand-to-mouth contacts and stored drinking water
ingestion in Bagamoyo, Tanzania. Child specific exposure data were
obtained from the USEPA 2011 Exposure Factors Handbook, and fecal
contamination was estimated using hand rinse and stored water fecal
indicator bacteria concentrations from over 1200 Tanzanian households.
The model outcome is a distribution of a child’s daily dose
of feces via each exposure route. The model results show that Tanzanian
children ingest a significantly greater amount of feces each day from
hand-to-mouth contacts than from drinking water, which may help elucidate
why interventions focused on water without also addressing hygiene
often see little to no effect on reported incidence of diarrhea