Heavy Metal concentrations in Drinking water sources of oil and non-oil producing communities in Rivers State: a cross-sectional study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.60787/tnhj.v24i1.778Keywords:
heavy metal, cross-sectional study, environmental exposure, drinking water, oil pollutionAbstract
Background: Chronic low-dose exposures to heavy metals are a huge public health problem in heavily polluted environments. This study aimed at comparing the heavy metal concentrations in drinking water sources of oil and non-oil-producing communities in Rivers State.
Method: This was a cross-sectional, comparative study conducted on water samples collected from 14 randomly selected water sources from crude oil and non-oil producing communities. Data analysis was done using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25. T-test was used to compare the mean differences between the heavy metal concentrations of the drinking water sources in the two communities.
Result: Mean lead concentrations of the drinking water sources of both communities exceeded the WHO permissible limits. Mean arsenic concentrations of the drinking water sources in the oil-producing community were higher than that of the non-oil-producing community (P >0.05). Mean concentrations of mercury were significantly higher in the oil-producing than in the non-oil-producing communities. (P-value = 0.005).
Conclusion: Heavy metal contamination of drinking water sources in oil and gas-producing communities in Nigeria is a potential human health disaster. This calls for consistent environmental monitoring of the environmental parameters of oil-producing and adjourning communities for clean-up interventions by all concerned stakeholders.
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