Arsenic Contamination of Drinking Water and Mental Health

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP10978

Authors: Shyamal Chowdhury; Annabelle Krause; Klaus F. Zimmermann

Abstract: This paper investigates the effect of drinking arsenic contaminated water on mental health. Drinking water with an unsafe arsenic level for a prolonged period can lead to arsenicosis, which includes symptoms such as black spots on the skin and subsequent illnesses such as various cancers. We collected household survey data from Bangladesh, a country with wide arsenic contamination of groundwater to construct several measures for arsenic contamination that include the actual arsenic level in the respondent?s tubewell (TW) and past institutional arsenic test results, as well as collected household members? arsenicosis symptoms and their physical and mental health. We find that suffering from an arsenicosis symptom is strongly negatively related to mental health, even more so than from other illnesses. Furthermore, individuals drinking from an untested TW have lower mental health and having to walk a longer distance to a TW also decreases mental health. Calculations of the costs of arsenic contamination reveal that the average individual would need to be compensated for suffering from an arsenicosis symptom by an amount as high as the average annual household income.

Keywords: arsenic; bangladesh; environment; mental health; subjective wellbeing; water pollution

JEL Codes: I10; I31; Q53


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
arsenicosis symptoms (I12)lower mental health (I12)
untested tubewells (Q25)lower mental health (I12)
longer distance to TW (R49)lower mental health (I12)
living with someone with arsenicosis symptoms (I12)lower mental health (I12)

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