Ah. Havelaar et al., Balancing the risks and benefits of drinking water disinfection: Disability adjusted life-years on the scale, ENVIR H PER, 108(4), 2000, pp. 315-321
To evaluate the applicability of disability adjusted life-years (DALYs) as
a measure to compare positive and negative health effects of drinking water
disinfection, we conducted a case study involving a hypothetical drinking
water supply from surface water. This drinking water supply is typical in T
he Netherlands. We compared the reduction of the risk of infection with Cry
ptosporidium parvum by ozonation of water to the concomitant increase in ri
sk of renal cell cancer arising from the production of bromate. We applied
clinical, epidemiologic, and toxicologic data on morbidity and mortality to
calculate the net health benefit in DALYs. We estimated the median risk of
infection with C. parvum as 10(-3)/person-year. Ozonation reduces the medi
an risk in the baseline approximately 7-fold, but bromate is produced in a
concentration above current guideline levels. However, the health benefits
of preventing gastroenteritis in the general population and premature death
in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome outweigh health losses
by premature death from renal cell cancer by a factor of > 10. The net ben
efit is approximately 1 DALY/million person-years. The application of DALYs
in principle allows us to more explicitly compare the public health risks
and benefits of different management options. In practice, the application
of DALYs may be hampered by the substantial degree of uncertainty, as is ty
pical for risk assessment.