Drinking water sources, mortality and diarrhoea morbidity among young
children in northern Ghana.
Shier RP, Dollimore N, Ross DA, Binka FN, Quigley M, Smith PG.
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.
In the Upper East Region of Ghana, considerable resources have been invested in
the provision of boreholes. As part of the Ghana Vitamin A Supplementation
Trials' Survival Study which was carried out in one of the districts of the
Upper East Region between January 1989 and December 1991, data were collected
over a period of one calendar year on the drinking water sources used by
approximately 13,000 mothers/guardians of over 20,000 children and on the
morbidity and mortality experiences of these children. These data were used to
describe seasonal and geographical variations in drinking water sources; to look
for other predictors of water source use; and to establish whether the drinking
water source was associated with the risk of child death or the period
prevalence of diarrhoea among young children. Boreholes were used as the main
source of drinking water by about 60-70% of respondents. They were used slightly
more frequently in the dry season. In the rainy season, the use increased of
more traditional sources such as rainwater or holes dug in stream beds. The use
of boreholes was greatest in the northern zone of the study area and was more
common in those who had had some formal education and were of higher
socioeconomic status. Some association was found between reported drinking water
source and diarrhoeal morbidity, although this association appeared to be
seasonal. No significant association was found between drinking water source and
child mortality.
PMID: 8673836