http://jscms.jrn.columbia.edu/cns/2005-03-15/schlesinger-arsenic

Cell phones help Bangladesh fight arsenic poisoning
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Victoria Schlesinger
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2005/03/15
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Bangladesh is facing a nationwide epidemic: arsenic poisoning. The  
chemical naturally occurs in the drinking water and is destroying the  
health of more than 40 million people. But new cell phone technology  
may provide a solution.
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When Joseph Graziano looked at the lesions on the palms of the young  
girl’s hands, he knew the threat of contaminated water in Bangladesh  
was greater than the medical community had realized.

Most scientists believed it took a decade of exposure to arsenic- 
tainted water before the open wounds associated with the carcinogenic  
chemical would manifest themselves on the hands, feet and torso.  But  
the 5-year-old girl standing in front of Graziano proved otherwise.

Now, six years later, there is a straightforward solution that could  
have saved her: cell phones. By sending cellular telephone text  
messages to a database, villagers in rural Bangladesh can now locate  
uncontaminated well water, a project that Graziano, the associate  
dean for the public health program at Columbia University, has helped  
develop since 1999.

“I think our big hope is that we’re catching a generation of kids by  
intervening early and preventing bad things from happening in their  
lives,” Graziano said.

Throughout Southeast Asia, parts of Latin America and the United  
States, arsenic is naturally released into the underground water  
table. Scientists are unsure how the process occurs, but the effects  
are undisputed. Some 40 million Bangladeshis are exposed to arsenic- 
contaminated water, which can lead to skin lesions, gangrene and  
cancer. Columbia researchers have also found that the poisonous  
chemical is responsible for lowering the IQs of children and that a  
pregnant mother can pass large amounts of the chemical on to her baby.

“Based on past exposure, cancer rates are likely to double in  
Bangladesh even if treatment begins now. People think this is the tip  
of the iceberg,” said Alexander van Geen, a senior research scientist  
at Columbia University and lead developer for the cell phone project,  
which falls under the auspices of the university’s Earth Institute.

The best way to address the problem, he said, is to avoid it.  Wells  
can be drilled to a depth where arsenic does not develop, but the  
trick is finding that safe level, which can vary from area to area.  
The water may be untainted in one well at 100 feet and in the  
neighboring village be contaminated all the way down to 200 feet.

The World Bank has so far invested $50 million into testing some 5.5  
million wells for arsenic throughout Bangladesh. Van Geen is  
compiling the test information into a database with a five-year, $15  
million grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's  
Superfund and the National Institutes of Health.

John Immel, a computer programmer with the project, is developing the  
database technology while on the ground in rural Bangladesh. Each day  
he travels into the densely populated villages, which are surrounded  
by acres of green rice paddies, and tests the database. Inevitably,  
he said, villagers gather around and ask him how deep to dig their  
new wells.

He hopes that shortly he will be able to answer their questions  
simply by sending a cell phone text message, including the village  
name and district, to the database. If all goes well, he will receive  
a return text message that lists the safest depths for wells in the  
area.

“I’m still testing the technology, so I can’t give them an answer  
prematurely,” Immel said. “But they are desperate to know what is a  
safe well depth.”

The test pilot project is due to be launched in the spring in  
Araiharja, a district about a quarter the size of Rhode Island that  
includes 30,000 wells spread between 300 villages.

In areas where arsenic-free wells have been dug, the team has seen  
dramatic changes in peoples’ health in just four years.

Through a simple urine test, Graziano has measured the before and  
after levels of arsenic in several thousand villagers once they began  
using clean water. He found that their arsenic contamination dropped  
by at least 25 percent.

While Graziano is encouraged by the data, he said the problem remains  
that not everyone has a good well.  Based on studies in Taiwan where  
people were exposed for long periods to arsenic-tainted water, cancer  
rates remained above normal even 40 years after clean water was made  
available. But he hopes to stop the poisoning early on.

“We see this dramatic decline,” Graziano said, “The visible skin  
lesions do reverse if the poisoning is not in a very advanced stage.”

Not everyone can afford a $40 phone in an area where the gross  
domestic product per person is $1,900. But Immel said this would not  
pose a problem because in almost every village at least one person  
owns a cell phone. Grameen Bank in Bangladesh makes small loans to  
village women so that they can purchase phones and start their own  
small businesses charging a usage fee.

According to Immel, the only significant obstacle to the project is  
the lack of cell phone coverage in some areas.  But even this seems  
surmountable, due to the 40 percent annual growth in the region’s  
cell phone market.

“The expectation is that we’ll have full coverage soon,” Immel said.

E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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