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PRIVATE WELL DISINFECTION & WATER SAMPLING

 

General Information

 

You do not want the water you drink, cook with, and wash dishes in to be contaminated with microorganisms that cause disease.  Unsafe water can spread a number of diseases known as "waterborne" infections - typhoid, cholera and dysentery, to name a few.  All of these illnesses are caused by microorganisms in the intestines of infected people and animals, who may not always appear to be sick.  Water supplies can be contaminated when the feces (bodily wastes) from infected individuals are not properly disposed of, and instead seep into underground water or run off into surface water supplies.

   

Unfortunately, disease-producing microorganisms are difficult to detect in water samples - fortunately, coliform bacteria are not hard to detect.

   

"Coliforms" are a group of micro-organisms that do not cause disease, but which are found in the lower intestinal tract of human beings and other warm-blooded animals.  Millions of coliforms are expelled each time a person or animal defecates.  So when coliform organisms are found in a water sample, they indicate that feces may have contaminated the water and that immediate action should be taken to stop the contaminations. 

 

When well water shows coliforms, disinfection procedures should be followed.  If a doctor suggests that gastric cramps or chronic diarrhea may have been caused by contaminated water, well disinfection should be performed immediately and water samples should be submitted for analysis.  In addition, recently constructed or recently repaired wells must be disinfected to prevent bacterial growth in the well and in the plumbing system.  Well disinfection procedures are described later.

   

For some water sources, continuous disinfection equipment should be installed:

  • any water source with repeated samples showing coliforms,

  • shadow wells,

  • hand-dug wells,

  • cisterns, or

  • surface water sources.

Information about continuous disinfection equipment may be obtained from local well drillers and plumbing suppliers.