Urban Water Disinfection and Mortality Decline in Developing Countries

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Author(s)
Bhalotra, S.R. et al.
Publication language
English
Pages
47pp
Date published
23 Oct 2017
Publisher
Center for Global Development
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Health, Urban, Water, sanitation and hygiene
Countries
Mexico

Historically, improvements in the quality of municipal drinking water made important contributions to mortality decline in wealthy countries. However, water disinfection has not produced equivalent benefits in developing countries today. We investigate this puzzle by analyzing a large-scale municipal water disinfection program in Mexico in 1991 that rapidly increased access to chlorinated water. On average, the program led to a 37–48 percent decline in child diarrheal disease mortality and was highly cost-effective. However, age (degradation) of water pipes and lack of complementary sanitation infrastructure attenuate these benefits. Our results suggest that childhood diarrheal disease mortality in Mexico would have declined by 86 percent if all municipalities had good quality infrastructure—a decline consistent with historical experience.