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Drinking water quality and enteric disease: a nationwide case-crossover study (2015-2019) in New Zealand
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Drinking water quality and enteric disease: a nationwide case-crossover study (2015-2019) in New Zealand

Tim Chambers, Simon Hales, Farnaz Pourzand, Frank Dean, Alice Hyun Min Kim, Mario Puente-Sierra, Lukas Marek, Matt Hobbs and Michael G Baker
Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology
25/03/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50323

Abstract

Environmental epidemiology New Zealand Drinking water Enteric disease
Background: Despite the well-known effects of microbiological contamination of drinking water on enteric disease, there is limited epidemiological research investigating the relationship with drinking water quality direct indicators. Objective: To investigate the association between drinking water direct indicators and enteric disease. Methods: This study used a nationwide case-crossover study design of 46,020 cases of enteric disease between 2015 and 2019. Cases were successfully linked to a public water supply and exposure to E. coli, total coliforms, turbidity and free available chlorine quantified for case and control periods. Results: There were no statistically significant associations found between all enteric, bacterial-only or protozoan-only enteric disease notifications and water quality direct indicators. The presence of E. coli was associated with increased risk of enteric disease in supplies served by surface water (OR 1.23: 95% CI 1.04, 1.46), with known source water risks (OR 1.28: 95% CI 1.08, 1.52) and where the case was exposed to the highest tertile of rainfall (OR 1.27: 95% CI 1.01, 1.58). Significance: Major outbreaks of enteric disease can be caused by contamination of public drinking water supplies. Our findings suggest that this mechanism might also be responsible for sporadic cases of enteric disease caused by zoonotic bacterial pathogens. Impact: This nationwide case-crossover study investigates the relationship between microbiological water quality and enteric disease in New Zealand. Linking over 46,000 cases (2015-2019) to public water supplies, we found that E. coli presence, particularly in surface water supplies with known source risks and during high rainfall, was significantly associated with increased enteric disease risk. These findings provide novel evidence that routine water quality indicators may predict sporadic enteric infections, reinforcing the need for enhanced microbial monitoring and treatment, especially in high-risk supply zones.
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s41370-026-00857-8View
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open

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