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1579244 
Journal Article 
Predicting water consumption habits for seven arsenic-safe water options in Bangladesh 
Inauen, J; Tobias, R; Molser, H-J 
2013 
Yes 
BMC Public Health
ISSN: 1471-2458 
13 
417 
English 
BACKGROUND: In Bangladesh, 20 million people are at the risk of developing arsenicosis because of excessive arsenic intake. Despite increased awareness, many of the implemented arsenic-safe water options are not being sufficiently used by the population. This study investigated the role of social-cognitive factors in explaining the habitual use of arsenic-safe water options.
METHODS: Eight hundred seventy-two randomly selected households in six arsenic-affected districts of rural Bangladesh, which had access to an arsenic-safe water option, were interviewed using structured face-to-face interviews in November 2009. Habitual use of arsenic-safe water options, severity, vulnerability, affective and instrumental attitudes, injunctive and descriptive norms, self-efficacy, and coping planning were measured. The data were analyzed using multiple linear regressions.
RESULTS: Linear regression revealed that self-efficacy (B = 0.42, SE = .03, p < .001), the instrumental attitude towards the safe water option (B = 0.24, SE = .04, p < .001), the affective attitude towards contaminated tube wells (B = -0.04, SE = .02, p = .024), vulnerability (B = -0.20, SE = .02, p < .001), as well as injunctive (B = 0.08, SE = 0.04, p = .049) and descriptive norms (B = 0.34, SE = .03, p < .001) primarily explained the habitual use of arsenic-safe water options (R2 = 0.688). This model proved highly generalizable to all seven arsenic-safe water options investigated, even though habitual use of single options were predicted on the basis of parameters estimated without these options.
CONCLUSIONS: This general model for the habitual use of arsenic-safe water options may prove useful to predict other water consumption habits. Behavior-change interventions are derived from the model to promote the habitual use of arsenic-safe water options. 
Habitual health behavior; Social-cognitive predictors; Arsenic-safe drinking water; Regression; Bangladesh 
IRIS
• Arsenic Hazard ID
          PubMed
          Considered New
          PubMed
          Considered New
          WOS
          Considered New
     2. Lit Search Updates through Oct 2015
          PubMed
          WOS
          Considered
     7. Other Studies through Oct 2015
          Other
• Arsenic (Inorganic)
     1. Literature
          Lit search updates through Oct 2015
     3. Hazard ID Screening
          Other potentially supporting studies
     5. Susceptibility Screening
          Excluded/Not relevant
• Arsenic Susceptibility
     1. Susceptibility Literature Screening
          Keyword Search
     2. Excluded
          Not Relevant