Piped water supply has often been referred to as a gold standard while evaluating access to water supply. For example, The Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP) rates piped water into the highest category while evaluating water access. The paper titled 'Upgrading a piped water supply from intermittent to continuous delivery and association with waterborne illness: A matched cohort study in urban India' published in the journal PLOS Medicine, argues that though widely considered the gold standard, the presence of a piped connection does not mean that it performs well in terms of quality, quantity, and frequency of water delivery. Piped water continues to be supplied intermittently in the vast majority of cities in low-income countries, with segments of the distribution network supplied with water on a rotating basis for a limited number of hours at a time.
Intermittent water provision through piped networks can increase the risk of waterborne diseases through contamination in non-pressurised pipes, recontamination during household storage due to use of unsafe alternative water sources, or limited water availability for hygiene. However, there are very few studies that have looked at the impact of intermittent delivery of piped water and the duration of intermittencies in water supply on the risk of illnesses among populations. This study in Hubli-Dharwad, Karnataka, India, compared outcomes of waterborne illnesses among children in areas with continuous versus intermittent water supply.
Download a copy of the paper below.