Health implications of chemicals found in the drinking water supply of members of an urban community in Rivers State, South–South Nigeria

Main Article Content

Samuel Chindah
Best Ordinioha

Abstract

Background: Efforts at improving access to drinking water almost always concentrate on increasing quantity, with little attention given to the quality of water. There is, however, increasing evidence of the significant contributions of chemicals found in drinking water on health. This study tested the drinking water supply  of Rumuola, a suburb of Port Harcourt, for possible chemical contamination. It also ascertained the human health implications of the detected contaminants in the water samples.



Methods: A cross-sectional, analytical study design was used. Water samples were collected from water facilities that serve most members of the community and analysed in an accredited laboratory, for nitrate, fluoride, calcium, arsenic, lead and iron, using atomic absorption spectrophotometer. A checklist was also used to assess a 30 m radius of each of the water facilities, for possible sources of contamination. An impact assessment was also carried out to ascertain the health implications of the contaminants identified in the water samples.



Results: Samples from eight water facilities were tested. All the samples contain detectable concentrations of iron, lead, nitrate, fluoride and calcium. The mean concentration of fluoride in the water samples was 0.01 mg/L; that of nitrate was 38.78 mg/L; the mean concentration of iron was 1.05 mg/L, those of lead and calcium were 0.094 and1 mg/L, respectively; while arsenic was not detected in any of the samples. The mean concentration of iron in the water samples can provide 12%–26% of the recommended daily allowance; while the mean concentration of lead of the samples is more than nine times the WHO permissible limit.



Conclusion: The concentrations of the assessed chemicals in the water supply can supply some percentage of the recommended daily intake while others can pose some adverse health effects.




Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Health implications of chemicals found in the drinking water supply of members of an urban community in Rivers State, South–South Nigeria. (2016). Port Harcourt Medical Journal, 10(3), 91-96. https://doi.org/10.60787/phmj.v10i3.44
Section
Original Articles

References

1. Huttly SR, Morris SS, Pisani V. Prevention of diarrhoea in young children in developing countries. Bull World Health Organ 1997;75:163‑74.

2. Billig P, Bendahmane D, Swindale A. Water and Sanitation Indicators Measurement Guide. Washington DC: Food and Nutrition Technical

Assistance Project, Academy for Educational Development, 1999; 7‑18.

3. Prüss‑Üstün A, Bos R, Gore F, BartramJ. Safer Water, Better Health: Costs, Benefits and Sustainability of Interventions to Protect and Promote Health. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2008.

4.Olivares M, Uauy R. Essential nutrients in drinking water. In: World Health Organization. Nutrients in Drinking Water. Geneva: World Health

Organization, 2005; 41‑60.

5. Klevay LM, Combs GF. Mineral elements related to cardio‑vascular health. In: World Health Organization. Nutrients in Drinking Water. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2005; 92‑5.

6. WHO/FAO/IAEA. Trace Elements in Human Nutrition and Health. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1996.

7.UNEP. Environmental Assessment of Ogoniland. Nairobi, Kenya: UNEP,2011.

8. World Health Organization. Guideline for Drinking Water Quality. 4th ed. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011.

9. Donohue JM, Abernathy CO, Lassovszky P, HallbergG. The contributions of drinking water to total daily dietary intakes of selected trace mineral nutrients in United States. In: World Health Organization. Nutrients in Drinking Water.Geneva: World Health Organization, 2005; 75‑91.

10. Bothwell TH, Charlton RW, Cook, JD, Finch CA. Iron Metabolism in Man. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, 1979.

11. Walter T, Olivares M, Pizarro F, Muñoz C. Iron, anemia, and infection. Nutr Rev 1997;55:111‑24.

12. Asubiojo OI, Nkono NA, Ogunsua AO, Oluwole AF, Ward NI, Akanle OA, et al. Trace elements in drinking and groundwater samples in Southern Nigeria. Sci Total Environ 1997;208:1‑8.

13. Amadi PA, Ofoegbu CO, Morrison T. Hydroeochemical assessment of groundwater quality in parts of the Niger delta, Nigeria. Environ Geol Water Sci 1989;14:195‑202.

14. Jeremiah ZA, Koate BB. Anaemia, iron deficiency and iron deficiency anaemia among blood donors in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. Blood Transfus

2010;8:113‑7.

15. Nkamare MB, Ofili AN, Adeleke AJ. Physico‑chemical and microbiologicalassessment of borehole water in Okutukutu, Bayelsa State, Nigeria. Adv Appl Sci Res 2012;3:2549‑52.

16. Wokoma FS, AlasiaDD. Blood pressure pattern in Barako: Arural community in Rivers State, Nigeria. Niger Health J 2011;11:8‑13.

17.Grobleri SR, LouwAJ, Van Kotze TJ. Dental fluorosis and caries experience in relation to three different drinking water fluoride levels in South Africa.Int J Paediatr Dent 2001;11:372‑9.

18. World Health Organization. Lead in Drinking‑water: Background Document for Development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking‑water Quality. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011.

19. Ziegler EE, Edwards BB, Jensen RL, Mahaffey KR, Fomon SJ. Absorption and retention of lead by infants. Pediatr Res 1978;12:29‑34.

20. Mahaffey KR. Nutritional factors and susceptibility to lead toxicity. Environ Health Perspect 1974;7:107‑12.

21. Rabinowitz MB, Wetherill GW, Kopple JD. Kinetic analysis of lead metabolism in healthy humans. J Clin Invest 1976;58:260‑70.

22. Succop PA, O’Flaherty EJ, BornscheinRL, ClaraCS, Krafft K, Hammond PB, et al. A kinetic model for estimating changes in the concentration of lead in the blood of young children. In: Lindberg SE, Hutchinson TC, editors. Heavy Metals in the Environment. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: CEP Consultants, 1987; 289.

23. World Health Organization. Evaluation of Certain Food Additives and Contaminants. Seventy‑third Report of the Joint FAO/WHO Expert

Committee on Food Additives. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011.

24. Brender JD, Olive JM, Felkner M, Suarez L, Marckwardt W, Hendricks KA. Dietary nitrites and nitrates, nitrosatable drugs, and neural tube defects. Epidemiology 2004;15:330‑6.

25. Brender JD, Weyer PJ, Romitti PA, Mohanty BP, Shinde MU, Vuong AM,et al. Prenatal nitrate intake from drinking water and selected birth defects in offspring of participants in the National Birth Defects Prevention Study. Environ Health Perspect 2013;121:1083‑9.

26. ManassaramDM, Backer LC, Messing R, Fleming LE, Luke B, Monteilh CP. Nitrates in drinking water and methemoglobin levels in pregnancy: A longitudinal study. Environ Health 2010;9:60.

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.