Volume 135, June 2015, Pages 124–132
Water systems, sanitation, and public health risks in remote communities: Inuit resident perspectives from the Canadian Arctic
Highlights
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- Water and sanitation management should be adapted to local environmental conditions.
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- Social, cultural and economic contexts must be included in infrastructure planning.
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- User perspectives on water and sanitation aid disease transmission pathway mapping.
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- Inclusive approaches improve health risk assessments in Aboriginal communities.
Abstract
Safe
drinking water and wastewater sanitation are universally recognized as
critical components of public health. It is well documented that a lack
of access to these basic services results in millions of preventable
deaths each year among vulnerable populations. Water and wastewater
technologies and management practices are frequently tailored to local
environmental conditions. Also important, but often overlooked in water
management planning, are the social, cultural and economic contexts in
which services are provided. The purpose of this qualitative case study
was to identify and understand residents' perceptions of the
functionality of current water and wastewater sanitation systems in one
vulnerable context, that of a remote Arctic Aboriginal community (Coral
Harbour, Nunavut), and to identify potential future water related health
risks. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 28 Inuit
residents and 9 key informants in 2011 and 2012. Findings indicate that
the population's rapid transition from a semi-nomadic hunting and
gathering lifestyle to permanent settlements with municipally provided
utilities is influencing present-day water usage patterns, public health
perceptions, and the level of priority decision-makers place on water
and wastewater management issues. Simultaneously environmental, social
and cultural conditions conducive to increased human exposure to
waterborne health risks were also found to exist and may be increasing
in the settlements. While water and wastewater system design decisions
are often based on best practices proven suitable in similar
environmental conditions, this study reinforces the argument for
inclusion of social, cultural, and economic variables in such decisions,
particularly in remote and economically challenged contexts in Canada
or elsewhere around the world. The results also indicate that the
addition of qualitative data about water and wastewater systems users'
behaviours to technical knowledge of systems and operations can enhance
the understanding of human–water interactions and be valuable in risk
assessments and intervention development.
Keywords
- Nunavut, Canada;
- Environmental health;
- Rural and remote health;
- Aboriginal health;
- Water and wastewater;
- Exposure pathways;
- Inuit health;
- Qualitative and visual methods
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