Bench-Marking Pool Water Treatment For Coping With Cryptosporidium

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ABSTRACT
The frequency of confirmed incidences of cryptosporidiosis associated with pool waters has increased. C.parvum oocysts are removed by filtration and inactivated by the chemical treatments used but only to various levels of success. Pool operators need an easy method for assessing the ability of their treatments to deal with oocysts.
The efficacy of a pool water treatment plant depends on its original design and on its existing condition and operation. Oocyst removal by filtration depends much on the size, depth and condition of the filter media, the filtration rate and effective use of coagulation.
Either ozone or chlorine dioxide treatment can produce useful inactivation especially at normal pool water temperatures. Chlorination used without other disinfectants has negligible effect in oocyst inactivation even with the long contact times.

However, allied to treatment with ozone or chlorine dioxide, chlorination can make a small contribution due to synergism.
Published results by various investigators of oocyst removal or inactivation are collated and adapted to provide a method for bench-marking the robustness of pool water treatment strategies for coping with oocyst-rich incidences. Key removal and inactivation data is set out as a set of easy look-up tables that is used in conjunction with basic information operators should know about their pool water treatment systems.

The information also provides pool operators with a means of identifying how they might optimize the performance of or upgrade their existing treatment strategies

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