Water Management and Public Health: A Case Study from Rural Mexico

This study provides a look into a small rural municipality in Mexico and analyzes the association between public health and water management. While first touching on the public health aspects of drinking water distribution, the study introduces the specific case of water management in Latin America...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cooper, Andrew
Format: Others
Published: Scholarly Repository 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_theses/281
Description
Summary:This study provides a look into a small rural municipality in Mexico and analyzes the association between public health and water management. While first touching on the public health aspects of drinking water distribution, the study introduces the specific case of water management in Latin America and specifically Mexico, focusing on the difficulties of distributing clean, potable water. The case study of Miacatlán, Morelos will provide the potential towards investigating how drinking water management involves more than a connection to a water faucet, and how many factors can affect the quality and potability of distributed water, such as management practices, socio-economics and larger political structures. This study will develop how certain water management practices have the potential to raise the quality of distributed drinking water, and subsequently the public health of rural municipalities in Mexico. While clear causality is not to be inferred between management and public health, this study instead underscores the potential benefits from implementing effective water management practices on the local, rural scale.