Drinking water quality in Indigenous communities in Canada and health outcomes: a scoping review

Int J Circumpolar Health. 2016 Jul 29:75:32336. doi: 10.3402/ijch.v75.32336. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Background: Many Indigenous communities in Canada live with high-risk drinking water systems and drinking water advisories and experience health status and water quality below that of the general population. A scoping review of research examining drinking water quality and its relationship to Indigenous health was conducted.

Objective: The study was undertaken to identify the extent of the literature, summarize current reports and identify research needs.

Design: A scoping review was designed to identify peer-reviewed literature that examined challenges related to drinking water and health in Indigenous communities in Canada. Key search terms were developed and mapped on five bibliographic databases (MEDLINE/PubMED, Web of Knowledge, SciVerse Scopus, Taylor and Francis online journal and Google Scholar). Online searches for grey literature using relevant government websites were completed.

Results: Sixteen articles (of 518; 156 bibliographic search engines, 362 grey literature) met criteria for inclusion (contained keywords; publication year 2000-2015; peer-reviewed and from Canada). Studies were quantitative (8), qualitative (5) or mixed (3) and included case, cohort, cross-sectional and participatory designs. In most articles, no definition of "health" was given (14/16), and the primary health issue described was gastrointestinal illness (12/16). Challenges to the study of health and well-being with respect to drinking water in Indigenous communities included irregular funding, remote locations, ethical approval processes, small sample sizes and missing data.

Conclusions: Research on drinking water and health outcomes in Indigenous communities in Canada is limited and occurs on an opportunistic basis. There is a need for more research funding, and inquiry to inform policy decisions for improvements of water quality and health-related outcomes in Indigenous communities. A coordinated network looking at First Nations water and health outcomes, a database to store and create access to research findings, increased funding and time frames for funding, and more decolonizing and community-based participatory research aimed at understanding the relationship between drinking water quality and health outcomes in First Nations communities in Canada are needed.

Keywords: Canada; First Nations; Indigenous communities; drinking water quality; health; scoping review.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Community Health Services
  • Drinking Water*
  • Health Status*
  • Humans
  • Population Groups*
  • Rural Health
  • Water Quality*
  • Water Supply

Substances

  • Drinking Water

Grants and funding