Improved Decision
Making for Water Lead Testing in
U.S. Child Care Facilities Using Machine-Learned Bayesian Networks
Posted on 2023-03-18 - 13:03
Tap water lead testing programs in the U.S. need improved
methods
for identifying high-risk facilities to optimize limited resources.
In this study, machine-learned Bayesian network (BN) models were used
to predict building-wide water lead risk in over 4,000 child care
facilities in North Carolina according to maximum and 90th percentile
lead levels from water lead concentrations at 22,943 taps. The performance
of the BN models was compared to common alternative risk factors,
or heuristics, used to inform water lead testing programs among child
care facilities including building age, water source, and Head Start
program status. The BN models identified a range of variables associated
with building-wide water lead, with facilities that serve low-income
families, rely on groundwater, and have more taps exhibiting greater
risk. Models predicting the probability of a single tap exceeding
each target concentration performed better than models predicting
facilities with clustered high-risk taps. The BN models’ Fβ-scores outperformed each of the alternative heuristics
by 118–213%. This represents up to a 60% increase in the number
of high-risk facilities that could be identified and up to a 49% decrease
in the number of samples that would need to be collected by using
BN model-informed sampling compared to using simple heuristics. Overall,
this study demonstrates the value of machine-learning approaches for
identifying high water lead risk that could improve lead testing programs
nationwide.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
Mulhern, Riley E.; Kondash, AJ; Norman, Ed; Johnson, Joseph; Levine, Keith; McWilliams, Andrea; et al. (2023): Improved Decision
Making for Water Lead Testing in
U.S. Child Care Facilities Using Machine-Learned Bayesian Networks. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c07477
or
Select your citation style and then place your mouse over the citation text to select it.
SHARE
Usage metrics
Read the peer-reviewed publication

AUTHORS (15)
RM
Riley E. Mulhern
AK
AJ Kondash
EN
Ed Norman
JJ
Joseph Johnson
KL
Keith Levine
AM
Andrea McWilliams
MN
Melanie Napier
FW
Frank Weber
LS
Laurie Stella
EW
Erica Wood
CL
Crystal Lee Pow Jackson
SC
Sarah Colley
JC
Jamie Cajka
JM
Jacqueline MacDonald Gibson
JH
Jennifer Hoponick Redmon
KEYWORDS
single tap exceedingoptimize limited resourcesnorth carolina accordinglearned bayesian networkimproved decision makingwide water leadwater lead testingwater lead concentrationsneed improved methodsusing bn modelusing simple heuristicsinformed sampling comparedmodels predicting facilitiesbn models identifiedwater sourcemodels predictingwould needbn modelsvariables associatedserve lowrisk tapsrisk facilitieslearning approachesincome familiesalternative heuristics943 taps