Assessment of Decontamination and Reuse of Disposable Filter Funnels Used in Microbiological Water Quality Tests
Abstract
To monitor safely managed drinking water services, an increasing number of countries have integrated water quality testing for Escherichia coli into nationally-representative household surveys such as the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS). However, plastic waste generated during such water quality testing programs, mostly through the use of pre-sterilized disposable materials, is non-negligible. The objective of this study was to evaluate several re-use protocols for disposable filter funnels used by the MICS water quality test kits. Decontamination and re-use protocols were assessed in centralized laboratory and decentralized field settings and neither yielded positive results. Re-use of 100 mL sterile funnels decontaminated with an alcohol wipe resulted in a higher incidence of false positive results (i.e., positive contamination when processing sterile water), both in the laboratory and field; therefore, a higher proportion of positives tests can be expected if these components are re-used. Further improvements to the decontamination technique and training are needed before material re-use can be reliably adopted. Autoclaving the funnels for re-use is feasible, provided that there is capacity to re-package and distribute funnels in a sterile manner. Show more
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https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000493511Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Environmental Health InsightsVolume
Publisher
SAGE PublicationsSubject
Drinking water quality; Escherichia coli; Microbial water testing; Plastics waste; Multiple indicator cluster surveys (MICS)Organisational unit
09746 - Tilley, Elizabeth / Tilley, Elizabeth
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