Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry cattle sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human faecal.
""Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry, cattle, sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water, especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human faecal contamination do reflect the contribution of non-human faecal contamination to risk. Does compliance with current monitoring practices using microbial indicators provide protection against animal and bird sources of fecal contamination? Prepared with contributions from a group of international experts, this book considers microbial contamination from domestic animal and bird sources and explores the health hazards associated with this microbial contamination and approaches to protecting public health. This book will be of interest to regulators with responsibility for recreational waters, drinking-water quality and water reuse; policymakers working in water quality, public health and agriculture; decision makers responsible for livestock management; and scientists and practitioners concerned with many affected subjects."--Résumé de l'éditeur."
""Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry, cattle, sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water, especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human faecal contamination do reflect the contribution of non-human faecal contamination to risk. Does compliance with current monitoring practices using microbial indicators provide protection against animal and bird sources of fecal contamination? Prepared with contributions from a group of international experts, this book considers microbial contamination from domestic animal and bird sources and explores the health hazards associated with this microbial contamination and approaches to protecting public health. This book will be of interest to regulators with responsibility for recreational waters, drinking-water quality and water reuse; policymakers working in water quality, public health and agriculture; decision makers responsible for livestock management; and scientists and practitioners concerned with many affected subjects."--Publisher description."
"Porte en 4ème de couv. : "Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry, cattle, sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water, especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human faecal contamination do reflect the contribution of non-human faecal contamination to risk. Does compliance with current monitoring practices using microbial indicators provide protection against animal and bird sources of fecal contamination? Prepared with contributions from a group of international experts, this book considers microbial contamination from domestic animal and bird sources and explores the health hazards associated with this microbial contamination and approaches to protecting public health. This book will be of interest to regulators with responsibility for recreational waters, drinking-water quality and water reuse; policymakers working in water quality, public health and agriculture; decision makers responsible for livestock management; and scientists and practitioners concerned with many affected subjects.""
"Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry cattle sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human faecal."@en
"Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry, cattle, sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water, especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human fecal contamination do reflect the contribution of non-human fecal contamination to risk. Does compliance with current monitoring practices using microbial indicators provide protection against animal and bird sources of fecal contamination? Prepared with contributions from a group of international experts, Animal Waste, Water Quality and Human Health considers microbial contamination from domestic animal and bird sources and explores the health hazards associated with this microbial contamination and approaches to protecting public health."@en
"Statement -- 1. Introduction / Jamie Bartram -- 2. Assessing the importance of zoonotic waterborne pathogens / Kumar Govind Suresh, Gary A. Toranzos, Ronald Fayer, Veeranoot Nissaparton, Remigio Olveda, Nicholas Ashbolt and Victor Gannon -- 3. Zoonotic waterborne pathogen loads in livestock / Edward R. Atwill, Xunde Li, Delia Grace and Victor Gannon / 4. Zoonotic waterborne pathogens in livestock and their excreta--interventions / Victor Gannon, Delia Grace and Edward R. Atwill -- 5. Transport of microbial pollution in catchment systems / Christobel Ferguson and David Kay -- 6. Effectiveness of best management practices for attenuating the transport of livestock-derived pathogens within catchments / David Kay, John Crowther, Christopher Kay, Adrian T. McDonald, Christobel Ferguson, Carl M. Stapleton and Mark D. Wyer -- 7. Exposure / Will Robertson and Gordon Yasvinski -- 8. Exposure interventions / Julie Kinzelman and Calum Mcphail -- 9. Indicators, sanitary surveys and source attribution techniques / Julie Kinzelman, Katharine G. Field, Hyatt C. Green, Valerie J. Harwood and Calum McPhail -- 10. Comparative risk analysis / Graham McBride, Tom Ross and Al Dufour -- 11. Epidemiological studies on swimmer health effects associated with potential exposure to zoonotic pathogens in bathing beach water--a review / Al Dufour, Timothy J. Wade and David Kay -- 12. Economic evaluation / Roy Brouwer and Stavros Georgiou -- Index."@en
"Statement -- 1. Introduction / Jamie Bartram -- 2. Assessing the importance of zoonotic waterborne pathogens / Kumar Govind Suresh, Gary A. Toranzos, Ronald Fayer, Veeranoot Nissaparton, Remigio Olveda, Nicholas Ashbolt and Victor Gannon -- 3. Zoonotic waterborne pathogen loads in livestock / Edward R. Atwill, Xunde Li, Delia Grace and Victor Gannon / 4. Zoonotic waterborne pathogens in livestock and their excreta--interventions / Victor Gannon, Delia Grace and Edward R. Atwill -- 5. Transport of microbial pollution in catchment systems / Christobel Ferguson and David Kay -- 6. Effectiveness of best management practices for attenuating the transport of livestock-derived pathogens within catchments / David Kay, John Crowther, Christopher Kay, Adrian T. McDonald, Christobel Ferguson, Carl M. Stapleton and Mark D. Wyer -- 7. Exposure / Will Robertson and Gordon Yasvinski -- 8. Exposure interventions / Julie Kinzelman and Calum Mcphail -- 9. Indicators, sanitary surveys and source attribution techniques / Julie Kinzelman, Katharine G. Field, Hyatt C. Green, Valerie J. Harwood and Calum McPhail -- 10. Comparative risk analysis / Graham McBride, Tom Ross and Al Dufour -- 11. Epidemiological studies on swimmer health effects associated with potential exposure to zoonotic pathogens in bathing beach water--a review / Al Dufour, Timothy J. Wade and David Kay -- 12. Economic evaluation / Roy Brouwer and Stavros Georgiou -- Index."
""Domestic animals contaminate recreational waters and drinking-water sources with excreta and pathogens; but this threat to public health is inadequately understood and is insufficiently addressed in regulations. More than 85% of the world's faecal wastes is from domestic animals such as poultry, cattle, sheep and pigs. These animals harbor zoonotic pathogens that are transported in the environment by water, especially runoff. However little information exists on health effects associated with exposure to this potential hazard to human health; and water standards focused on control of human faecal contamination do reflect the contribution of non-human faecal contamination to risk. Does compliance with current monitoring practices using microbial indicators provide protection against animal and bird sources of fecal contamination? Prepared with contributions from a group of international experts, this book considers microbial contamination from domestic animal and bird sources and explores the health hazards associated with this microbial contamination and approaches to protecting public health. This book will be of interest to regulators with responsibility for recreational waters, drinking-water quality and water reuse; policymakers working in water quality, public health and agriculture; decision makers responsible for livestock management; and scientists and practitioners concerned with many affected subjects."--"@en
Workshop on Animal Waste, Water Quality, and Human Health (2009 : University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
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