Microbial risk assessment of source-separated urine used in agriculture.

Caroline Höglund, Thor Axel Stenström, Nicholas Ashbolt
Author Information
  1. Caroline Höglund: Department of Water and Environmental Microbiology, Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control, Solna. caroline.hoglund@smi.ki.se

Abstract

A screening-level quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) was undertaken for a urine separating sewerage system. Exposures evaluated included the handling of stored and unstored urine as well as consumption of crops fertilised with urine. Faecal cross-contamination was the source of risk and Campylobacter jejuni, Cryptosporidium parvum and rotavirus were the organisms chosen to represent different groups of enteric pathogens. Accidental ingestion of unstored urine implied a high risk (Pinf = 0.56) for infection from rotavirus whereas the risks for infection from bacteria and protozoa were approximately 1:10 000. After six months storage at 20 degrees C the risk for viral infections by accidental ingestion of 1 ml of urine was < 10(-3), the suggested acceptable risk benchmark. Ingestion of crops contaminated with urine resulted in risks of < 10(-5) after a 3-week (<10(-7) after 4 weeks) withholding period between fertilising and harvesting.

MeSH Term

Agriculture
Animals
Bacteria
Conservation of Natural Resources
Disease Transmission, Infectious
Eukaryota
Risk Assessment
Urine
Viruses
Waste Disposal, Fluid
Water Microbiology

Word Cloud

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