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In the News…
Public Health and Drinking Water News Briefs
| June 27, 2008
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| Salmonella Can Ride Water into Tomatoes |
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Pick a tomato in the blazing sun and plunge it straight into cold
water. If that happened on the way to market, it might be contaminated.
Too big of a temperature difference can make a tomato literally
suck water inside the fruit through the scar where its stem used
to be. If salmonella happens to be lurking on the skin, that's one
way it can penetrate and, if the tomato isn't eaten right away,
have time to multiply.
There are some common themes when fresh produce makes people sick,
either from salmonella - bacteria that live in the intestinal tracts
of humans and numerous animals - or other microbes: Water sources,
worker hygiene and wildlife or domestic animals near fields are
frequent culprits because they involve points where safety systems
can easily break down.
Water is an automatic first suspect. Was clean water used to irrigate,
mix pesticides sprayed on crops, wash down harvest and processing
equipment, and wash field workers' hands? Then in packing houses,
tomatoes often go straight into a dump tank, flumes of chlorinated
water for a first wash. To guard against salmonella washed into
the water in turn being sucked into the tomatoes, producers often
keep wash-water 10 degrees warmer than the incoming crop.
Studies never have shown that plant roots can suck salmonella up
and inside the tomato, where it can't be washed out. Still, if contaminated
water is sprayed onto the leaves or blooms, or bird droppings fall
directly onto the foliage, salmonella might be absorbed internally.
In fact, salmonella may be particularly hard to prevent in a variety
of crops because birds, reptiles and amphibians carry it - the same
reason children should wash their hands after handling a turtle,
iguana or frog. The tomato industry's guidelines already advise
surrounding fields with bare soil "buffer zones" to discourage reptiles.
To read more about this story, please visit:
The Associated
Press
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| WHO Report: Polluted Water Kills 4,000 People Daily |
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Polluted drinking water will kill around 1.6 million people
world-wide this year unless governments make a concerted effort
to clean up their supplies, a World Health Organization (WHO) official
warned in a recent report.
More than 4,000 people die every day from water-borne diseases,
said Dr James Bertram, coordinator of WHO's Water, Sanitation and
Health Program. The death toll is not confined to developing nations.
A UN Environment Program report predicted that the escalating
burden of water demand will become "intolerable in water-scarce
countries" within the next few decades. Governments need to
look at new technologies such as desalination and special filtration
systems, officials said, and invest heavily in building and maintaining
water infrastructure.
There has been some progress. For the first time last year, more
than 50 per cent of the world's 6 billion people obtained their
water through a pipe. Most of this water, however, is unreliable
and unsafe.
To read more about this topic, please go to:
The World Health Organization's site
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| Growing Pains: The Epidemiological Transition in Mexico |
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The south of Mexico has the highest levels of infectious and nutritional
disease, injuries, and non-communicable diseases according to a
study released on June 16, 2008 in the open access journal PLoS
Medicine.
The loss of healthy life years was compared to actual deaths using
a standard metric called the "disability-adjusted life year" or
DALY. One DALY is equivalent to the loss of a single year of health
life because of premature death or disability.
Nationally, 75 percent of all deaths and 68 percent of all DALYs
are caused by non-communicable diseases, in particular heart disease,
diabetes, stroke, and cirrhosis of the liver. Fourteen percent of
deaths and 18 percent of DALYs were in turn caused by undernutrition,
infectious diseases, and problems occurring in mothers and infants
at the time of birth. The leading risk factors for disease were
overweight status, high blood glucose, and alcohol consumption.
The "epidemiological transition" is the shift in disease pattern
as a poor country becomes richer, away from infectious diseases
and malnutrition and toward noncommunicable diseases. In this study,
it became clear that Mexico is in fact a nation that is seeing this
transition, as its improved economic status shifts the disease burden
towards these diseases that are neither infectious nor related to
undernutrition. However, liver cirrhosis and diabetes, with their
corresponding alcohol use, overweight and obesity levels, and high
blood glucose are extremely important in describing Mexico's health
burden. In the poorest parts of the country, the population is lagging
behind in the epidemiological transition.
To read more about this study, please go to:
Medical News Today
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| Associations, EPA Release Tools for Effective Utility Management Practices |
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Six associations representing the U.S. water and wastewater sector,
in collaboration with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
have released a series of tools designed to help water and wastewater
utilities advance effective management practices to achieve long-term
sustainability. The tools are based on the 10 Attributes of Effectively
Managed Utilities and five Keys to Management Success first
identified in a report released by the group in May 2007.
The tools now available include the Effective Utility Management
Primer for Water and Wastewater Utilities that is designed to
help water and wastewater utility managers make practical, systematic
changes to achieve excellence in utility performance. It was produced
by water and wastewater utility leaders who also developed a series
of suggested Utility Performance Measures focused on the Attributes
to help utilities establish a performance baseline and begin to
measure their progress. Finally, the group is releasing an online
Resource Toolbox that contains links to key resources and tools.
To view the online Resource Toolbox, please go to the:
WaterEUM site
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In The News-is
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