Animal Feces Contribute to Domestic Fecal Contamination: Evidence from E-coli Measured in Water, Hands, Food, Flies, and Soil in Bangladesh

作者:Ercumen Ayse*; Pickering Amy J; Kwong Laura H; Arnold Benjamin F; Parvez Sarker Masud; Alam Mahfuja; Sen Debashis; Islam Sharmin; Kullmann Craig; Chase Claire; Ahmed Rokeya; Unicomb Leanne; Luby Stephen P; Colford John M Jr
来源:Environmental Science & Technology, 2017, 51(15): 8725-8734.
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.7b01710

摘要

Fecal-oral pathogens are transmitted through complex, environmentally mediated pathways. Sanitation interventions that isolate human feces from the environment may reduce transmission but have shown limited impact on environmental contamination. We conducted a study in rural Bangladesh to (1) quantify domestic fecal contamination in settings with high on-site sanitation coverage; (2) determine how domestic animals affect fecal contamination; and (3) assess how each environmental pathway affects others. We collected water, hand rinse, food, soil, and fly samples from 608 households. We analyzed samples with IDEXX Quantitray for the most probable number (MPN) of E. coli. We detected E. coli in source water (25%), stored water (77%), child hands (43%), food (58%), flies (50%), ponds (97%), and soil (95%). Soil had >120 000 mean MPN E. coli per gram. In compounds with vs without animals, E. coli was higher by 0.54 log(10) in soil, 0.40 log(10) in stored water and 0.61 log(10) in food (p < 0.05). E. coli in stored water and food increased with increasing E. coli in soil, ponds, source water and hands. We provide empirical evidence transmission in the domestic environment despite on-site sanitation. Animal feces contribute to fecal contamination, and fecal indicator bacteria do not strictly indicate human fecal contamination when animals are present.

  • 出版日期2017-8-1