4.6 Article

Geostatistical model of the spatial distribution of arsenic in groundwaters in Gujarat State, India

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOCHEMISTRY AND HEALTH
Volume 43, Issue 7, Pages 2649-2664

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10653-020-00655-7

Keywords

Groundwater; Arsenic; Health impacts; Gujarat; Logistic regression; Geostatistics

Funding

  1. United Kingdom's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (IAA Impact Award)
  2. Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation [7F-09963.01.01]

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Groundwater arsenic contamination poses severe health risks globally, with studies in Gujarat State revealing areas with high arsenic hazard concentrations. Despite estimated cases of diseases, the overall groundwater arsenic hazard in Gujarat State is relatively low.
Geogenic arsenic contamination in groundwaters poses a severe health risk to hundreds of millions of people globally. Notwithstanding the particular risks to exposed populations in the Indian sub-continent, at the time of writing, there was a paucity of geostatistically based models of the spatial distribution of groundwater hazard in India. In this study, we used logistic regression models of secondary groundwater arsenic data with research-informed secondary soil, climate and topographic variables as principal predictors generate hazard and risk maps of groundwater arsenic at a resolution of 1 km across Gujarat State. By combining models based on different arsenic concentrations, we have generated a pseudo-contour map of groundwater arsenic concentrations, which indicates greater arsenic hazard (> 10 mu g/L) in the northwest, northeast and south-east parts of Kachchh District as well as northwest and southwest Banas Kantha District. The total number of people living in areas in Gujarat with groundwater arsenic concentration exceeding 10 mu g/L is estimated to be around 122,000, of which we estimate approximately 49,000 people consume groundwater exceeding 10 mu g/L. Using simple previously published dose-response relationships, this is estimated to have given rise to 700 (prevalence) cases of skin cancer and around 10 cases of premature avoidable mortality/annum from internal (lung, liver, bladder) cancers-that latter value is on the order of just 0.001% of internal cancers in Gujarat, reflecting the relative low groundwater arsenic hazard in Gujarat State.

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