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Health guidelines for the use of wastewater in agriculture and aquaculture : report of a WHO scientific group [meeting held in Geneva from 18 to 23 November 1987]

By: WHO Scientific Group on Health Aspects of Use of Treated Wastewater for Agriculture and AquacultureContributor(s): World Health OrganizationMaterial type: TextTextSeries: World Health Organization technical report series ; no. 778Publication details: Geneva : World Health Organization, 1989. Description: 74 pISBN: 9241207787Subject(s): Sewage | Water microbiology | Soil microbiology | Water Supply and SanitationNLM classification: WA 785Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: Issues revised technical and practical guidelines for the use of wastewater in agricultural irrigation, greenspace watering, and fish production in accordance with measures that protect the environment and safeguard against the transmission of disease. Representing the consensus reached by an international group of experts, the book introduces an approach to wastewater use that is at once less restrictive than previous guidelines and more realistic in terms of documented risks to health. Throughout, an effort is made to give water resource managers the evidence, quality indicators, and technical advice needed to exploit this valuable resource without endangering public health. The book opens with a brief review of the origins of previous guidelines, experiences with their use, and reasons why their quality standards are now regarded as too restrictive in terms of bacterial indicators and inadequate in terms of their failure to protect against the major risk of helminth infections. The most extensive part of the book focuses on health problems and measures for protection. Tables, diagrams and charts help document specific problems in terms of the characteristics and environmental behaviour of excreted pathogens, survival times for pathogens in soil and on crops, measures of health risks, including the epidemiological concept of actual or attributable risk, and factors influencing the degree to which a potential risk posed by a pathogen can become an actual risk of disease transmission. Against this background, the book issues detailed effluent microbiological quality guidelines for agriculture, gives tentative guidelines for aquaculture, and outlines a series of health protection measures.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books WHO HQ
READING-RM
HQ SERIAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00020982
Books Books WHO HQ
READING-RM
HQ SERIAL ARA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00029850
Books Books WHO HQ
DISCARD
WA 785 89WH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Withdrawn 00020983
Books Books WHO HQ
ONLINE-IRIS
WA 785 89WH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available O41768

Issues revised technical and practical guidelines for the use of wastewater in agricultural irrigation, greenspace watering, and fish production in accordance with measures that protect the environment and safeguard against the transmission of disease. Representing the consensus reached by an international group of experts, the book introduces an approach to wastewater use that is at once less restrictive than previous guidelines and more realistic in terms of documented risks to health. Throughout, an effort is made to give water resource managers the evidence, quality indicators, and technical advice needed to exploit this valuable resource without endangering public health. The book opens with a brief review of the origins of previous guidelines, experiences with their use, and reasons why their quality standards are now regarded as too restrictive in terms of bacterial indicators and inadequate in terms of their failure to protect against the major risk of helminth infections. The most extensive part of the book focuses on health problems and measures for protection. Tables, diagrams and charts help document specific problems in terms of the characteristics and environmental behaviour of excreted pathogens, survival times for pathogens in soil and on crops, measures of health risks, including the epidemiological concept of actual or attributable risk, and factors influencing the degree to which a potential risk posed by a pathogen can become an actual risk of disease transmission. Against this background, the book issues detailed effluent microbiological quality guidelines for agriculture, gives tentative guidelines for aquaculture, and outlines a series of health protection measures.

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