TY - JOUR
T1 - Measuring Human Water Needs
AU - Wutich, Amber
AU - Rosinger, Asher Y.
AU - Stoler, Justin
AU - Jepson, Wendy
AU - Brewis, Alexandra
N1 - Funding Information:
Our work was supported by NSF grant BCS‐1759972 HWISE RCN: Building A Community of Practice for Household Water Insecurity Research (HWISE). Wutich and Brewis acknowledge support for the Global Ethnohydrology Study, funded as part of the ASU Center for Global Health. Wutich received support from NSF grants SES‐1462086 and DEB‐1637590. We thank our close colleagues Barbara Piperata and Amanda L. Thompson for generously providing feedback on earlier drafts and helping us to improve the clarity of our thinking and writing.
Funding Information:
Our work was supported by NSF grant BCS-1759972 HWISE RCN: Building A Community of Practice for Household Water Insecurity Research (HWISE). Wutich and Brewis acknowledge support for the Global Ethnohydrology Study, funded as part of the ASU Center for Global Health. Wutich received support from NSF grants SES-1462086 and DEB-1637590. We thank our close colleagues Barbara Piperata and Amanda L. Thompson for generously providing feedback on earlier drafts and helping us to improve the clarity of our thinking and writing.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors. American Journal of Human Biology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Water connects the environment, culture, and biology, yet only recently has it emerged as a major focus for research in human biology. To facilitate such research, we describe methods to measure biological, environmental, and perceptual indicators of human water needs. This toolkit provides an overview of methods for assessing different dimensions of human water need, both well-established and newly-developed. These include: (a) markers of hydration (eg, urine specific gravity, doubly labeled water) important for measuring the impacts of water need on human biological functioning; (b) methods for measuring water quality (eg, digital colorimeter, membrane filtration) essential for understanding the health risks associated with exposure to microbiological, organic, metal, inorganic nonmental, and other contaminants; and (c) assessments of household water insecurity status that track aspects of unmet water needs (eg, inadequate water service, unaffordability, and experiences of water insecurity) that are directly relevant to human health and biology. Together, these methods can advance new research about the role of water in human biology and health, including the ways that insufficient, unsafe, or insecure water produces negative biological and health outcomes.
AB - Water connects the environment, culture, and biology, yet only recently has it emerged as a major focus for research in human biology. To facilitate such research, we describe methods to measure biological, environmental, and perceptual indicators of human water needs. This toolkit provides an overview of methods for assessing different dimensions of human water need, both well-established and newly-developed. These include: (a) markers of hydration (eg, urine specific gravity, doubly labeled water) important for measuring the impacts of water need on human biological functioning; (b) methods for measuring water quality (eg, digital colorimeter, membrane filtration) essential for understanding the health risks associated with exposure to microbiological, organic, metal, inorganic nonmental, and other contaminants; and (c) assessments of household water insecurity status that track aspects of unmet water needs (eg, inadequate water service, unaffordability, and experiences of water insecurity) that are directly relevant to human health and biology. Together, these methods can advance new research about the role of water in human biology and health, including the ways that insufficient, unsafe, or insecure water produces negative biological and health outcomes.
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U2 - 10.1002/ajhb.23350
DO - 10.1002/ajhb.23350
M3 - Article
C2 - 31702101
AN - SCOPUS:85075151834
SN - 1042-0533
VL - 32
JO - American Journal of Human Biology
JF - American Journal of Human Biology
IS - 1
M1 - e23350
ER -