The impact of drinking water quality from different sources on population health
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Keywords

population morbidity
Prut River aqueduct
artesian wells
wells

How to Cite

FRIPTULEAC, G., MIRON, I. and BERNIC, V. (2022) “The impact of drinking water quality from different sources on population health”, One Health & Risk Management , 3(2S), p. 15. Available at: https://journal.ohrm.bba.md/index.php/journal-ohrm-bba-md/article/view/318 (Accessed: 16April2024).

Abstract

Introduction. The data literature analysis shows that water quality plays an important role in the health of the population. In the Republic of Moldova, water
supply is a pressing problem, since the water sources are unevenly distributed on the territory and the quality of the water, in many cases, does not correspond to
the existing national standards. In this sense, the relationship "water - quality of life" is characterized not only from a socio-economic point of view, but also by
both objective and subjective indicators, with population health being the foreground issue.
Material and methods. In order to highlight certain morbid and premorbid forms conditioned by the quality of the drinking water, the population morbidity
through the most frequently diagnosed nosologies was studied and evaluated by using a modern research organization methodology. For this purpose, the morbidity
rate among people that use water from the following 3 different sources was investigated and analyzed: the aqueduct fed from the Prut river, artesian wells,
and wells. At the same time, both the age and gender of the consumers were taken into account.
Results. According to the survey, the general morbidity rate is the lowest among subjects who use water from the aqueduct supplied from the Prut river, and the
highest numbers were found among subjects who use water from the aqueduct supplied from artesian wells. The majority of the population suffers from several
simultaneous chronic diseases. Among the population who consumes water from the aqueduct fed by the Prut River prevails hypertension – 14.2%, pancreatitis –
10.3%, cholecystitis – 12.3%, hepatitis – 3.7% and osteohondrosis – 8.8%. Cases of anemia were found only in people who consume water from wells (12.2%), and
nephrolithiasis was found in about 1.5% of cases in the same population. In cases of water consumption from the aqueduct supplied from the wells, most cases revealed an ischemic heart disease – 7.3%, gastritis and duodenitis – 8,8%, radiculitis – 4.5%, arthropathy – 3.8% and pyelonephritis – 7.1%. The analysis of the
morbidity through the mentioned nosologies shows that the frequency of diseases increases directly proportional to age and that they are diagnosed more frequently
among women who consume water from the aqueduct fed from the river and from comparative wells. On the other hand, the morbidity of people who drink
water from wells is higher among men than women.
Conclusions. The analysis of the population's health status emphasizes the impact of the water source used for drinking and sex- and age-dependent characteristics.
It was found that the drinking water from the aqueduct fed from the river is much more harmless for the population's health since it is much less mineralized
(0.46–0.66 g/dm3).

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