Approximately 34 million Americans rely on private wells to supply their drinking water. Private wells are excluded from the Safe Drinking Water Act. Consequently, people who use private wells have not benefited from pollution prevention activities mandated by this law. This is a public health concern because toxic chemicals such as arsenic, nitrate, and lead are frequently detected in drinking water provided by private wells at concentrations that exceed the Safe Drinking Water Act's maximum contaminant levels. Chronic exposure to toxics in drinking water increase the risk of several chronic diseases. Several states in the U.S. have implemented or are proposing legislative policies to require testing and treatment of private wells and it is critical that public health agencies offer a program to aid homeowners with adherence to these new policies. Subsequently, there is a need to determine if individual-level interventions would be more effective for promoting behaviors that would reduce, mitigate, or eliminate exposure to contaminated well water. Lay health care workers may be able to provide cost-effective counseling to promote environmental health decision making among homeowners that have contaminated wells. This study will involve a community efficacy trial that brings together university-based researchers, State and Local agencies, and Extension Services. The community efficacy trial will be implemented by community health navigators via the Extension service. Specifically, it will involve a randomized controlled trial in Oregon to test the acceptability, fidelity, scalability and efficacy of 2 different intervention arms to reduce harmful toxicant exposures through the adoption of appropriate well water treatment. Upon completion, it will will produce a private well safety intervention program that has been tested and modified through empirical research. By capturing the costs and retaining the most efficacious intervention components, our cooperative approach has a better chance of scalability into practice across multiple stakeholders (i.e. Extension services, state health agencies). This information has the potential to reduce health disparities in rural America that are related to a household's source of drinking water.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
98
A trained navigator (e.g. OSU Extension staff) will have 3 meetings with the participants in Arm 2. These meetings will be held in person, on the phone, or in zoom.
Oregon State University
Corvallis, Oregon, United States
Treatment implemented by homeowner that will reduce their exposure to arsenic, nitrate or lead in their drinking water
The homeowner has adopted behaviors that will be appropriate for reducing their exposure to arsenic, nitrate, and lead in their drinking water. This will be assessed based on the homeowners response on a survey delivered after 12 month. Appropriate treatment will be defined as the use of drinking water technology that removes the contaminant detected (e.g. reverse osmosis, distillation, arsenic removal filter, or removal of lead-based water fixtures) or switching to bottled water for drinking and cooking.
Time frame: 12 months
Clean water sample
A water sample that is collected from their home's kitchen faucet is tested by a certified laboratory and the contaminant of concern (arsenic, nitrate, or lead) is below its maximum contaminant level (arsenic \< 10ug/L; nitrate \<10mg/L, and lead \<15 ug/L)
Time frame: 12 months
Well Stewardship Behaviors
This will be assessed based on questions in the homeowner survey which asks the participants what actions they take to test, treat, and maintain the water quality that is coming from their private well.
Time frame: 6 and 12 months
Health literacy
1. Water Environmental Literacy Level Scale - WELLS is a 6-item scale. The reference for this is: Irvin, V. L., Rohlman, D., Vaughan, A., Amantia, R., Berlin, C., \& Kile, M. L. (2019). Development and Validation of an Environmental Health Literacy Assessment Screening Tool for Domestic Well Owners: The Water Environmental Literacy Level Scale (WELLS). International journal of environmental research and public health, 16(5), 881. doi:10.3390/ijerph16050881 2. Brief Health Literacy Screener (Chew Items) is a 3-item scale. The reference for this: Chew, L.D., Bradley, K.A., \& Boyko, E.J. (2004). Brief questions to identify patients with inadequate health literacy. Family Medicine, 36(8): 588-594.
Time frame: 6 months and 12 months
Risk perception
This will be assessed our homeowner survey which includes a condensed form of the RANAS (Risk, Attitude, Norms, Ability, Self-Regulation) Scales published in Flannigan et al (2015) Dissemination of well water arsenic results to homeowners in Central Maine: influences on mitigation behavior and continued risks for exposure. Sci Total Environ, 505: 1282-90.
Time frame: 6 months and 12 months
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