2019
DOI: 10.1186/s13643-019-1013-9
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Factors influencing perceptions of private water quality in North America: a systematic review

Abstract: Background An estimated four million and 43 million people in Canada and the USA use private water supplies. Private water supplies are vulnerable to waterborne disease outbreaks. Private water supplies in Canada and the USA are often unregulated and private water management is often a choice left to the owner. Perceptions of water quality become important in influencing the adoption of private water stewardship practices, therefore safeguarding public health. Methods W… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…For instance, many well owners were confident in their water quality, despite infrequent testing and invalidly relying on their sensory perceptions to detect contamination. A recent review of factors influencing perceptions of private well water quality in North America identified well water quality perceptions as an important consideration in well water testing behavior, upholding this aspect of our findings [49]. Individuals appear to be more motivated to test their own well if they learn that a neighbor has tested than if they learn that wells in their town/vicinity are actually contaminated.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…For instance, many well owners were confident in their water quality, despite infrequent testing and invalidly relying on their sensory perceptions to detect contamination. A recent review of factors influencing perceptions of private well water quality in North America identified well water quality perceptions as an important consideration in well water testing behavior, upholding this aspect of our findings [49]. Individuals appear to be more motivated to test their own well if they learn that a neighbor has tested than if they learn that wells in their town/vicinity are actually contaminated.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Based on the above, the responsibility for ensuring water safety in the sources of non-centralized water supply is still with individual households. This statement is also reflected in the work of Zheng, Flanagan (2017), Hooks et al (2019), and Munene, Hall (2019).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Several Canadian studies have noted that while the majority of well users are able to identify environmental risks associated with contamination events in private wells (e.g., proximity to livestock and septic tanks, flooding, etc. ), their perception of water quality in response to these risks are indirectly mediated by changes to organoleptic properties and not necessarily the physical presentation of symptomatic infection (Malecki, Schultz, Severtson, Anderson, & VanDerslice, 2017; Munene & Hall, 2019; Roche, Jones‐Bitton, Majowicz, Pintar, & Allison, 2013). Thus, well users do not seem to accurately perceive risk in drinking the well water and will continue to be exposed and risk possible infection from waterborne pathogens.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%