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AGU: Water Resources Research

 

Index Terms

  • Hydrology: Groundwater quality
  • Policy Sciences: Decision making under uncertainty
  • Policy Sciences: Benefit-cost analysis
  • Hydrology: Groundwater hydrology

Abstract

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, VOL. 39, 1146, 17 PP., 2003
doi:10.1029/2002WR001327

Arsenic in groundwater in Bangladesh: A geostatistical and epidemiological framework for evaluating health effects and potential remedies

Winston H. Yu

Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

Charles M. Harvey

School of Public Health, Center for Risk Analysis, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Charles F. Harvey

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Ralph M. Parsons Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Masshachusetts, USA

This paper examines the health crisis in Bangladesh due to dissolved arsenic in groundwater. First, we use geostatistical methods to construct a map of arsenic concentrations that divides Bangladesh into regions and estimate vertical concentration trends in these regions. Then, we use census data to estimate exposure distributions in the regions; we use epidemiological data from West Bengal and Taiwan to estimate dose response functions for arsenicosis and arsenic-induced cancers; and we combine the regional exposure distributions and the dose response models to estimate the health effects of groundwater arsenic in Bangladesh. We predict that long-term exposure to present arsenic concentrations will result in approximately 1,200,000 cases of hyperpigmentation, 600,000 cases of keratosis, 125,000 cases of skin cancer, and 3000 fatalities per year from internal cancers. Although these estimates are very uncertain, the method provides a framework for incorporating better data as it becomes available. Moreover, we examine the remedy of drilling deeper wells in selected regions of Bangladesh. By replacing 31% of the wells in the country with deeper wells the health effects of drinking groundwater arsenic could be reduced by approximately 70% provided that arsenic concentrations in deep wells remain relatively low.

Received 20 March 2002; accepted 14 March 2003; published 6 June 2003.

Citation: Yu, W. H., C. M. Harvey, and C. F. Harvey (2003), Arsenic in groundwater in Bangladesh: A geostatistical and epidemiological framework for evaluating health effects and potential remedies, Water Resour. Res., 39(6), 1146, doi:10.1029/2002WR001327.

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