The Meanings of Water: Socio-Cultural Perceptions of Solar Disinfected (SODIS) Drinking Water in Bolivia and Implications for its Uptake
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Site
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Local Classification of Child Diarrhoea
3.2. Perceptions of Risks Associated with Drinking Water
- Moderator:
- ‘Have you ever seen these “bugs”?’
- Respondent 1:
- ‘We have not seen them, only the people from BoliviaWET have told us there are bugs. We have not seen them with our own eyes. If we saw them, they would disgust us, but if we don’t see them, we drink the water as if there were just nothing in there.’
- Respondent 2:
- ‘If we saw the bugs, we would not drink the water. We would appreciate if they would just show us. We could believe it if we saw what type of “bugs” they are talking about.’
- Moderator:
- ‘Don’t you trust them then?’
- Respondent 2:
- ‘Yes, yes, we do.’
- Moderator:
- ‘But you want to see them in order to believe it?’
- Respondent 1:
- ‘If we don’t see, we don’t believe. We ask ourselves, will it always be true? But we see our water is clean.’
- Moderator:
- ‘When you drink a certain type of water, can you get diarrhoea or fall ill?’
- Respondent 2:
- ‘No, our stomachs are already used to it […] Maybe we get diarrhoea from the water from another source.’
- Respondent 3:
- ‘We don’t know where the diarrhoea comes from, because every day we drink this water, some of us since we were born.’
- Moderator:
- ‘And doesn’t it affect you?’
- Respondent 3:
- ‘We don’t know from what we get ill from. If we drank this water and fell ill shortly after, it could be. However, this is not the case. We drink this water every day.’
3.3. Perceived Efficacy of the SODIS HWT Method
3.4. Local Classification of Drinking Water
- a-
- ‘Boiled’ like boiled water, because ‘the sun boiled the water’,
- b-
- ‘Boiled’ but to a lesser degree than boiled water,
- c-
- Neither ‘raw’ nor ‘boiled’: ‘it looks like “raw” water, but it is not because it is also sort of half-boiled. It has been cooked by the sun; thus, it doesn’t appear natural anymore’,
- d-
- ‘Badly boiled’ (closer to ‘raw’ water) and, therefore, potentially harmful: ‘SODIS water is always “raw” as it is only warmed in the sun […]. Whereas boiling makes the water well-cooked, what does the sun do?’
3.5. The Taste of SODIS Water as a Barrier for its Uptake
4. Discussion
4.1. SODIS Water Within the Local Interpretation of the ‘Hot and Cold’ Theory
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Nuño Martínez, N.; Muela Ribera, J.; Hausmann-Muela, S.; Cevallos, M.; Hartinger, S.M.; Christen, A.; Mäusezahl, D. The Meanings of Water: Socio-Cultural Perceptions of Solar Disinfected (SODIS) Drinking Water in Bolivia and Implications for its Uptake. Water 2020, 12, 442. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12020442
Nuño Martínez N, Muela Ribera J, Hausmann-Muela S, Cevallos M, Hartinger SM, Christen A, Mäusezahl D. The Meanings of Water: Socio-Cultural Perceptions of Solar Disinfected (SODIS) Drinking Water in Bolivia and Implications for its Uptake. Water. 2020; 12(2):442. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12020442
Chicago/Turabian StyleNuño Martínez, Néstor, Joan Muela Ribera, Susanna Hausmann-Muela, Myriam Cevallos, Stella María Hartinger, Andri Christen, and Daniel Mäusezahl. 2020. "The Meanings of Water: Socio-Cultural Perceptions of Solar Disinfected (SODIS) Drinking Water in Bolivia and Implications for its Uptake" Water 12, no. 2: 442. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12020442
APA StyleNuño Martínez, N., Muela Ribera, J., Hausmann-Muela, S., Cevallos, M., Hartinger, S. M., Christen, A., & Mäusezahl, D. (2020). The Meanings of Water: Socio-Cultural Perceptions of Solar Disinfected (SODIS) Drinking Water in Bolivia and Implications for its Uptake. Water, 12(2), 442. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12020442