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Hossain searches for solution to arsenic poisoning in rural areas |
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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Nov. 22, 2005) — While millions of his native
countrymen in Bangladesh suffer from arsenic poisoning in their drinking
water, Faisal Hossain works to find an efficient and affordable solution
to manage the crisis. Arsenic, the "king of poisons" slipped to royalty throughout
the ages, now poses a grave danger to at least half of the rural population
of Bangladesh and other countries with similar geology, such as India,
Vietnam, Cambodia and Mexico. "We are working on borrowed time," said Hossain, a Tennessee
Tech University civil and environmental engineering professor. "We
must accelerate priority testing of the rural drinking water system in
order to reduce the risk that arsenic poses to villagers." About 50-60 million people in Bangladesh are exposed to toxic levels
of arsenic through water drawn from shallow wells. Hossain says there
could be as many as 20 million wells in the rural countryside, making
it virtually impossible to test every well comprehensively because of
the time and money involved. In the early 90s, the poisoning reached epidemic scale and continues
to worsen. According to the World Health Organization, long-term exposure
to arsenic via drinking water causes cancer of the skin, lungs, bladder
and kidneys, as well as skin changes such as pigmentation abnormalities
and hyperkeratosis, a thickening of the skin. Hossain and colleagues at the University of Connecticut, University of
California-Davis, and Bangladesh's Rajshahi University and Engineering
University have set a goal to devise an efficient and low-cost way to
identify and shut down unsafe wells. Testing wells is expensive and time-consuming; accurate testing requires
that each sample be sent to a quality environmental lab equipped with
an expensive Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometer. The government has opted
instead to test wells by inexpensive hand-held kits (each costing about
a dollar and requiring 30 minutes of testing time). These kits, however,
tend to have large errors in reporting the results. "For one particular brand, we observed that the kit had only a 10
percent chance of correctly detecting a safe well. This means that 90
percent of the time the villagers use the kit they are likely to get the
false impression of an unsafe well being safe. It’s akin to an HIV-infected
person being tested negative and told not to worry anymore," said
Hossain. The rampant and large-scale use of such kits without knowledge of their
reliability is alarming not just for Bangladesh, but for other developing
countries that are considering these inexpensive devices to manage their
arsenic problem. "Another issue currently overlooked by researchers is the need to
propose solutions that fit into the social fabric of how rural people
collect water," he said. "Recent social studies indicate that
villagers would rather travel far away once a day to collect their daily
requirement of safe drinking water than be burdened with a water treatment
system that is difficult to maintain." Hossain and his colleagues are currently working on an adaptive model
that can pick up patterns on how the arsenic varies so that only a few
wells have to be accurately tested in order to predict if others are safe
or unsafe. The group employs two sister theories, Chaos and Fractals,
which some researchers doubt can be applied to this problem. "Even though the patterns may seem random at first sight, mother
nature often times has a tendency to repeat itself on the basis of a ‘code’
that lurks behind this apparent randomness – the order hidden in
randomness is called Chaos. "The theory of chaos means that once the code is identified, we
should be able to look at a relatively fewer number of accurately tested
wells and be able to improve prediction of well characteristics on a larger
collection of untested wells," he said. "Now, think of a head of cauliflower, you pull one section out and
it looks very much like a small version of the next larger section and
the same all the way to the whole. This describes the phenomenon called
Fractals," said Hossain. "We learn about the whole by studying
the smaller sections. "By flagging a safe cluster of wells, or by shutting down unsafe
clusters, we can provide villagers a rapid, socially and financially more
convenient choice to travel to a safe wells," he said. "Our recent work has revealed that it is indeed possible to connect
the theory of chaos to improve prediction characteristics of untested
wells. This is probably something that the scientific community has not
witnessed up to now as far as the arsenic problem is concerned,"
said Hossain. So excited is he and his team of collaborators, that Hossain cannot wait
to present his team’s recent findings at the upcoming American Geophysical
Union Meeting in December this year at San Francisco. " Such results are always bound to raise a few eyebrows among skeptics
and believers of chaos theory alike," chuckled Hossain. As a firm believer in serving calamity affected society, Hossain emphasizes
that when a large portion of the rural population continues to suffer
from the arsenic calamity, the more fortunate ones with time to brainstorm
and drink arsenic-free water have the responsibility to critically assess
any novel approach until a long-term structural solution is found for
Bangladesh. Interested readers can find more information about Hossain’s work at http://iweb.tntech.edu/fhossain.
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