posted on 2017-05-20, 00:00authored byAlasdair Cohen, Qi Zhang, Qing Luo, Yong Tao, John M. Colford, Isha Ray
Approximately
two billion people drink unsafe water. Boiling is
the most commonly used household water treatment (HWT) method globally
and in China. HWT can make water safer, but sustained adoption is
rare and bottled water consumption is growing. To successfully promote
HWT, an understanding of associated socioeconomic factors is critical.
We collected survey data and water samples from 450 rural households
in Guangxi Province, China. Covariates were grouped into blocks to
hierarchically construct modified Poisson models and estimate risk
ratios (RR) associated with boiling methods, bottled water, and untreated
water. Female-headed households were most likely to boil (RR = 1.36, p < 0.01), and among boilers those using electric kettles
rather than pots had higher income proxies (e.g., per capita TV ownership
RR = 1.42, p < 0.01). Higher-income households
with younger, literate, and male heads were more likely to purchase
(frequently contaminated) bottled water, or use electric kettles if
they boiled. Our findings show that boiling is not an undifferentiated
practice, but one with different methods of varying effectiveness,
environmental impact, and adoption across socioeconomic strata. Our
results can inform programs to promote safer and more efficient boiling
using electric kettles, and suggest that if rural China’s economy
continues to grow then bottled water use will increase.