The Guardian (USA)

Water insecurity causes psychologi­cal distress for Americans, study finds

- Nina Lakhani in New York

Unaffordab­le water bills and the threat of disconnect­ion causes significan­t psychologi­cal distress for Americans, according to a new study.

A Guardian investigat­ion into 12 American cities found the price of water and sewage increased by an average of 80% between 2010 and 2018, with more than two-fifths of residents in some cities living in neighborho­ods with unaffordab­le bills.

The study, published in the Journal of Public Health, is the first to also examine and reveal the relationsh­ip between water insecurity and psychosoci­al distress in the US, where millions of households are disconnect­ed each year because of overdue bills.

Researcher­s surveyed residents from a low-income neighborho­od in

Detroit, where at least 141,000 have been disconnect­ed since the city filed for bankruptcy in 2014 as part of a widely condemned debt-collection policy targeting mostly poor black residents.

Overall, water insecurity was significan­tly linked to psychologi­cal distress, the study found. The mental health impact was greatest among people who had recently received a shutoff notice. Residents who had previously been disconnect­ed, and those who felt bills were unaffordab­le also reported psychologi­cal distress.

“Water is vital to health, of course, but also to human dignity. For the world’s wealthiest country to be segregatin­g access, it takes a toll. We’re only beginning to appreciate the level of water worry that poor people in this country carry,” said Nadia Gaber, lead research from the department of anthropolo­gy, history and social medicine at the University of California San Francisco.

In addition, in the previous two years more than 80% of respondent­s reported having drunk water that may have been unsafe and/or borrowed, or shared water with a friend or family member. Three-quarters of respondent­s worried about having their children removed by authoritie­s because of a water shutoff, while almost 60% of respondent­s reused water for household tasks.

The small study adds to the evolving body of evidence about the mental health consequenc­es of socalled “water worry” that results from unaffordab­le bills and the collapse of

services following natural disasters.

Even before the coronaviru­s pandemic caused widespread economic misery, millions of ordinary families were facing unaffordab­le bills for running water, a Guardian series found earlier this year. Now, advocates fear that the fallout from Covid could lead to a huge rise in families unable to afford their water bills amid unpreceden­ted job losses.

“The pandemic has brought the level of structural neglect in our society to light, and at the heart of that is access to clean water – this brewing crisis many Americans are just beginning to realize,” added Gaber.

The Guardian’s investigat­ion exposed the painful impact of America’s expanding water poverty crisis as aging infrastruc­ture, environmen­tal cleanups, changing demographi­cs and the climate emergency price hikes.

Nowhere has the unfolding affordabil­ity crisis hit harder than Detroit, where water rates have increased by up to 400% in the last 20 years. Almost four in 10 Detroit residents live in poverty, the highest rate among the 20 fuel exponentia­l largest US cities.

The UN described the mass shutoffs as “contrary to human rights” and condemned the disproport­ionate impact on African Americans, who account for 80% of the city.

 ?? Photograph: Mackenzie Lad/AP ?? Three-quarters of respondent­s worried about having their children removed by authoritie­s due to a water shutoff, while almost 60% reused water for household tasks.
Photograph: Mackenzie Lad/AP Three-quarters of respondent­s worried about having their children removed by authoritie­s due to a water shutoff, while almost 60% reused water for household tasks.

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