Persistent Ascaris Transmission Is Possible in Urban Areas Even Where Sanitation Coverage Is High.
Drew CaponeTroy BarkerOliver CummingAbeoseh FlemisterRiley GeasonElizabeth KimJackie KneeYarrow LindenMusa MangaMackenzie MeldrumRassul NalaSimrill SmithJoe BrownPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
In low-income, urban, informal communities lacking sewerage and solid waste services, onsite sanitation (sludges, aqueous effluent) and child feces are potential sources of human fecal contamination in living environments. Working in informal communities of urban Maputo, Mozambique, we developed a quantitative, stochastic, mass-balance approach to evaluate plausible scenarios of localized contamination that could explain why the soil-transmitted helminth Ascaris remains endemic despite nearly universal coverage of latrines that sequester most fecal wastes. We used microscopy to enumerate presumptively viable Ascaris ova in feces, fecal sludges, and soils from compounds (i.e., household clusters) and then constructed a steady-state mass-balance model to evaluate possible contamination scenarios capable of explaining observed ova counts in soils. Observed Ascaris counts (mean = -0.01 log 10 ova per wet gram of soil, sd = 0.71 log 10 ) could be explained by deposits of 1.9 grams per day (10th percentile 0.04 grams, 90th percentile 84 grams) of child feces on average, rare fecal sludge contamination events that transport 17 kg every three years (10th percentile 1.0 kg, 90th percentile 260 kg), or a daily discharge of 2.7 kg aqueous effluent from an onsite system (10th percentile 0.09 kg, 90th percentile 82 kg). Results suggest that even limited intermittent flows of fecal wastes in this setting can result in a steady-state density of Ascaris ova in soils capable of sustaining transmission, given the high prevalence of Ascaris shedding by children (prevalence = 25%; mean = 3.7 log 10 per wet gram, sd = 1.1 log 10 ), the high Ascaris ova counts in fecal sludges (prevalence = 88%; mean = 1.8 log 10 per wet gram, sd = 0.95 log 10 ), and the extended persistence and viability of Ascaris ova in soils. Even near-universal coverage of onsite sanitation may allow for sustained transmission of Ascaris under these conditions.
Keyphrases
- drinking water
- human health
- heavy metals
- risk assessment
- wastewater treatment
- health risk
- anaerobic digestion
- climate change
- mental health
- gram negative
- sewage sludge
- healthcare
- high resolution
- risk factors
- endothelial cells
- affordable care act
- young adults
- organic matter
- multidrug resistant
- high throughput
- optical coherence tomography
- high speed
- mass spectrometry