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Curriculum Vitae Jamie Bartram Don and Jennifer Holzworth Distinguished Professor of Environmental Sciences and Engineering and Director of the Water Institute at UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 144 Rosenau Hall, CB #7431, 135 Dauer Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7431, USA Fax: +1 (919) 966-7911, email: [email protected] Full Name James Kniveton Bartram Nationality British Languages English: first language. Spanish: excellent. Italian: working knowledge. French: working knowledge. Country Experience Albania, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Colombia, Croatia, Cyprus, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Guatemala, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, India, Israel, Italy*, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Latvia, Lesotho, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Mozambique, Nepal, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Peru*, Philippines, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, Senegal, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland*, Tanzania, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, UK*, USA*, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Viet Nam, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe (asterisk indicates multi- year residence). Education PhD, University of Surrey, 1996 (thesis: Optimizing the Monitoring and Assessment of Rural Water Supplies). BSc (Hons, First Class) in Microbiology, University of Surrey, 1985. HNC (Higher National Certificate) in Medical Laboratory Sciences (special subject: microbiology), Paddington Technical College, London, UK, 1982. Professional Experience June 2009 to date Director of the ‘Water Institute at UNC’ and Professor (since 2012: Don and Jennifer Holzworth Distinguished Professor), Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Responsibilities include: Conceiving a Water Institute at UNC and serving as founding director. Managing stakeholder consultation to inform development of a strategic plan and its implementation. Overseeing Institute development including staffing, fundraising, development of processes and periodic review and strategy updating. Formal 5- year review documented extensive impact on policy (including international development policy, the MDGs and SDGs being a target for influence); programming (including several large NGOs and government); and practice concluding that “in six short years the Water Institute has carved out an estimable role as one of the most important centers for applied research and knowledge synthesis on [water sanitation and hygiene-related] issues in the entire world.” Over my first nine years at UNC (mid-2009 to June 2018), I received more than 100 funded grants and awards, ranging in value from $1,500 to $2.1 million, for a

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Page 1: Curriculum Vitae - Jamie Bartram · Curriculum Vitae – Jamie Bartram 3 Representing WHO in high-level international scientific and policy forums. Fostering partnerships. The Unit

Curriculum Vitae – Jamie Bartram

Don and Jennifer Holzworth Distinguished Professor of Environmental Sciences and Engineering and Director of the Water Institute at UNC

Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 144 Rosenau Hall, CB #7431, 135 Dauer Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7431, USA

Fax: +1 (919) 966-7911, email: [email protected]

Full Name James Kniveton Bartram

Nationality British

Languages English: first language. Spanish: excellent. Italian: working knowledge. French: working knowledge.

Country Experience Albania, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Colombia, Croatia, Cyprus, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Guatemala, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, India, Israel, Italy*, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Latvia, Lesotho, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Mozambique, Nepal, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Peru*, Philippines, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, Senegal, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland*, Tanzania, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, UK*, USA*, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Viet Nam, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe (asterisk indicates multi-year residence).

Education PhD, University of Surrey, 1996 (thesis: Optimizing the Monitoring and Assessment of Rural

Water Supplies). BSc (Hons, First Class) in Microbiology, University of Surrey, 1985. HNC (Higher National Certificate) in Medical Laboratory Sciences (special subject: microbiology), Paddington Technical College, London, UK, 1982.

Professional Experience June 2009

to date Director of the ‘Water Institute at UNC’ and Professor (since 2012: Don and Jennifer Holzworth Distinguished Professor), Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Responsibilities include:

Conceiving a Water Institute at UNC and serving as founding director. Managing stakeholder consultation to inform development of a strategic plan and its implementation. Overseeing Institute development including staffing, fundraising, development of processes and periodic review and strategy updating. Formal 5-year review documented extensive impact on policy (including international development policy, the MDGs and SDGs being a target for influence); programming (including several large NGOs and government); and practice concluding that “in six short years the Water Institute has carved out an estimable role as one of the most important centers for applied research and knowledge synthesis on [water sanitation and hygiene-related] issues in the entire world.”

Over my first nine years at UNC (mid-2009 to June 2018), I received more than 100 funded grants and awards, ranging in value from $1,500 to $2.1 million, for a

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total value of $15,226,843 from 46 different awarding bodies.

My own research comprises: operational research normally in partnership with implementing agencies such as international NGOs; policy research into national and international policy initiatives and alternatives and their outcomes; and research into the impacts of environmental health interventions both proximal (such as improved drinking water management) and distal (such as adaptation to climate extremes).

Teaching. I developed four new courses, all in cooperation with other Faculty, two now taught annually; and was part of team that re-conceptualised the MSEE degree.

Student advising. Over my first nine years at UNC I advised to graduation: four doctoral students, 18 Master’s degree students and three undergraduates pursuing honours theses. I currently have 10 advisees, from undergraduates to post-doctoral researchers.

Service: to school, university and profession (see below.)

Other achievements Secured designation of the Water Institute at UNC as a World Health

Organization and Pan-American Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Water and Sanitation (2017–2021), serving as Centre Director.

Supported the design, development and launch of the US Water Partnership, launched by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on World Water Day 2012, with the Water Institute at UNC as one of five founding partners. Chair of Membership Working Group and Steering Committee member.

Development of new Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (IWA Publishing), serving as Editor-in-Chief until 2018, ISI indexed 2013; impact factor rising to 0.8 in 2016.

Launch of the Water Institute at ‘Water and Health: where science meets policy’ Conference, October 2010; and development of the conference as a signature annual event. Annual Water Microbiology conference launched in 2014 and biennial Nexus conference in 2015.

Secured adoption of, and served as co-chair of, UNC-Chapel Hill inaugural campus-wide theme ‘Water in our World’ (2012–2015).

Co-conceived, with Chancellor Carol Folt, UNC Three Zeroes threezeros.unc.edu/

Sponsored Catarina de Albuquerque for a UNC honorary degree (2015).

Oct 2006 to June 2009 (parallel to the below for 2006)

Coordinator: Assessing and Managing Environmental Risks to Health, World Health Organization (WHO) Headquarters (Geneva, Switzerland).

Leading and managing a Unit with a biennial budget of. US$21.5 million (staff and activity).

Responsibilities included:

Contributing to organization-wide and departmental strategic planning.

Defining and developing WHO’s roles, responsibilities and strategic direction in assessing and managing environmental health risks.

Developing and implementing plans of work, monitoring performance, and instituting corrections; managing resources and ensuring highest standards.

Personnel management and staff development; also Chair of the WHO Global Reassignment Committee (2008–9).

Mobilizing technical and financial resources.

Providing leadership in formulation of evidence-based interventions.

Identifying emerging technical and policy issues and initiating responses.

Advising governments on strategies to reduce disease burden.

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Representing WHO in high-level international scientific and policy forums.

Fostering partnerships.

The Unit focused on ensuring an adequate evidence base to support policy-making and decision-taking in public health and environment, through:

International leadership on risk assessment.

Servicing international conventions and agreements.

Monitoring MDG and other international development targets.

Developing normative 'guidelines' and supporting their implementation.

Assessing health risks, burden of disease and health impact.

Providing tools and assessments on cost and impact of disease control.

Guidance on good practices and policy and technical alternatives.

Serving as WHO focal point for environmental emergencies and disasters.

Key achievements

Development and implementation of strategy on environment and health in emergencies: stockpiling, rosters of trained experts, information ‘toolkit’, comprehensive web site and first systematic review of detected events.

Conceptualize and initiate an ‘annual report’ (GLAAS) on country progress and ESA support on water and sanitation, under the aegis of UN-Water.

2004–2006 (in parallel

with the above and

below)

Chair, UN-Water.

Elected chair of the body that ensures coherence and coordination in UN system action on water and related issues. Principal roles in leadership of overall direction and coordination amongst 23 UN agencies and 12 international partners.

Key achievements during my chair-ship:

Negotiated 23-agency agreement on Terms of Reference.

Established transparent and participatory structure for previously closed ‘mechanism’.

Development of a membership and institutional architecture including increasing UN agency membership, 12 international partner entities, central resource and establishing dedicated associated offices.

Oversaw development and initial implementation of first inter-agency Plans of Work in five key areas: disaster reduction, water scarcity, gender, sanitation and trans-boundary waters.

Increased annual funding for UN-Water offices from US$2 to 7.5 million.

Ensured visibility in inter-governmental forums e.g. Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD-13).

1999–2006 (parallel to the above for 2004–

2006)

Coordinator, Water Sanitation and Health, World Health Organization Headquarters (Geneva, Switzerland).

Leading and managing a Unit addressing water, sanitation and health issues with a biennial activity budget of US $3.2 million. The Unit was the subject of a very positive internal evaluation in 2006.

Responsibilities included:

Personnel management and staff development; also alternate Chair of WHO Global Reassignment Committee (2006–7).

Oversight of strategic direction, programme and project development.

Resource mobilization and budgeting and management.

Development of networks of collaborators, Collaborating Centres and communities of practice.

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Key achievements:

New communication strategy addressing multilingualism and innovative use of electronic media, placing the Unit as third most visited WHO web site and having 15 of the 50 most in-demand documents from WHO HQ.

Major change in approach to international norms (‘standards’), delivered through a series of formal guidelines (drinking-water, recreational water environments, use of wastewater excreta and grey-water in agriculture and in aquaculture, ship sanitation, hygiene and sanitation in aviation), now applied in more than 90 developing and developed countries.

Rehabilitation of the WHO/UNICEF ‘Joint Monitoring Programme’ as official MDG and UN system-wide monitoring system for water and sanitation.

Establishment of networks of practice: 70+ member 'Network for Safe Household Water' (government, NGO, private sector); 30-partner ‘Sanitation Connection’; small community water and sanitation; and water regulators.

Refocusing staff and plan of work towards WHO 'country focus' including technical and managerial changes and system-wide resource mobilization.

Developing new work areas: costs and impacts of interventions; water and sanitation in health care facilities; and legal aspects of water management.

Launch of a successful new Journal: Journal of Water and Health (co-published with the International Water Association).

World Water Day 2001 (theme: water and health, led by WHO).

1998–1999 Scientist, Protection of Health and Environment, World Health Organization Headquarters (Geneva, Switzerland).

Responsible for management and implementation of several areas of normative work including Guidelines development and updating and development of tools for good practice.

Key achievements:

Initiated harmonization across a series of international guidelines (standards) dealing with different hazard types and exposure pathways.

Led a major refocusing of drinking water quality management towards a preventive management approach now widely recognized as a major development and applied widely in developing and developed countries.

Initiated development of a series of publications on assessment and management of risks associated with drinking-water supply and safety.

1994–1998 Regional Advisor, Water and Wastes, World Health Organization, European Centre

for Environment and Health (Rome, Italy).

Within the Organization’s European Region, responsible for:

Environment and health activities concerning especially international water bodies, such as the River Danube and the Black, Caspian and Aral Seas.

Technical lead for WHO on development of the 1999 Protocol on Water and Health to 1992 Convention on Protection and Use of Trans-Boundary Watercourses and International Lakes and supporting documentation (this is only the third legally-binding health instrument associated with WHO and had been ratified by 26 countries as of 2016).

Also: representation of the Organization to international bodies and meetings; member of NEHAP task group; management and development of the Water and Wastes Unit; and development of Collaborating Centre networks related to water and wastes.

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In cooperation with WHO headquarters, responsible for planning and implementing WHO activities of relating to:

Development and updating of water-related environmental quality guidelines including rolling revision of the ‘microbial’ and ‘protection and control’ elements of Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality and initial development of Guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments (two volumes).

Key achievements:

Development of response capacity through partnerships especially with Collaborating Centres and major international/inter-agency projects.

Establishment of a ‘rolling revision’ process for the WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality to increase timeliness and transparency of process.

1992–1994 Head, Division of Environmental Health, Robens Institute, University of Surrey

(Guildford, UK).

Responsible for all aspects of an expanding Division comprising about 15 staff.

The Division’s principal areas of work included: environmental monitoring; recreational water and health; evaluation of water treatment; sanitation; hygiene education; environmental policy; land restoration; and microbial aspects of water supply and sanitation.

Responsible for Institute activities as a WHO Collaborating Centre for the Protection of Drinking Water Quality and Human Health.

Key achievements:

Launch of two innovative modular training programmes (an MSc in Environmental Management and Health and an Advanced Certificate in Water Quality Management delivered overseas).

A general increase in research activity.

Financial turn-around such that the Division operated at break-even.

1990–1992 Manager of Overseas Development, Robens Institute, University of Surrey,

Guildford, UK.

Responsible for management of overseas development activities:

Project planning and management.

Low-cost water testing equipment supply; training and information support.

Liaison with funding agencies.

Training and technical inputs to projects.

Co-ordination, monitoring and administration of projects.

Teaching and student supervision in the UK, on MSc course and overseas.

Key achievements:

Recognition of international development as a legitimate area of work for institute staff.

Involvement of staff from across Divisions in associated activities.

1988–1989 Research Officer, Robens Institute, University of Surrey, UK (based in Peru).

Principal activities on Peruvian Water Supply Surveillance Programme: personnel and project evaluation; liaison with national and regional Environmental Health Directors; development and implementation of training; national database development; report preparation for funding agency; planning for national implementation; preparation of procedures manuals.

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Other activities: consultancies: for British Red Cross water supply and sanitation project in Armero, Colombia; for WHO/PAHO to Ecuador for training for water supply surveillance; for British Red Cross hygiene education programme in Mexico City; lecturer and project supervisor on postgraduate diploma course.

Key achievements:

Establishment of a cell in the national ‘Technical Directorate of Environmental Sanitation’ to support rural and urban drinking-water safety.

Publication of first proposed indicator set for water supply adequacy.

1986–1987 Public Health Scientist, DelAgua Ltd (Public Health Consultants) (based in Peru).

Principal activities: field training; coordination of activities and evaluation of planning, implementation, reporting and data analysis by field staff; evaluation of needs, distribution of equipment, consumables and funds for the Peruvian Water Supply Surveillance and Improvement Programme.

Other activities: Consultancies to WHO/PAHO for training for water supply surveillance in Mexico; technical advice and assistance in script preparation to PAHO/WHO (CEPIS) for training videos on water supply and sanitation.

Key achievements:

Organization and implementation of logistical support and training to 35 staff in 11 very dispersed centres to provide support to drinking water safety activities to 350 piped rural water supplies.

Development, with other team members, of now internationally-recognised basis for surveillance of the adequacy of rural water supply.

1985 Research Assistant, Department of Microbiology, University of Surrey, UK.

Research on quantitative isolation and identification of toxigenic pathogens and pathogenic mechanisms.

1979–1982 Medical Laboratory Scientific Officer, Great Ormond Street and Hackney Children’s

Hospitals, London, UK.

Honours and Awards 2018 WEF (Water Environment Federation) “Pioneer Award”, for significant and innovative

contributions to the field of disinfection. 2012 to

date Don and Jennifer Holzworth Distinguished Professor, UNC.

2009–2018 Visiting Professor, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences (latterly in Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences), University of Surrey, UK (renewed 2012, 2015).

2017 Astor Visiting Lectureship, University of Oxford, UK. 2000–2012 Honorary Professor, University of Aberystwyth, Wales, UK.

2012 UNC University Day Speaker: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fqx7B4IRYlU 2007–2011 Visiting Professor, University of Bristol, UK.

2009 Rebecca L Calderon Distinguished Lecture (USEPA). 2006 Pumphandle Lecture (the annual lecture of the John Snow Society, RSPH) delivered

at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. 2004 IWA (International Water Association) ‘Grand Award’. 1985 Morgan Prize, Department of Microbiology, University of Surrey, UK. 1984 Metal Box Scholarship, University of Surrey, UK.

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Editorial Positions 2017 to date Editorial Board, Journal of Pre-Publication-One Health. 2013 to date Editorial Board, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2012 to date Editorial Board, Global Health Perspectives. 2003 to date Editorial Board: Journal of Water and Health.

2010–2018 Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (launched 2011, ISI listed 2013; impact factor rising to 0.8 for 2016).

2015–2017 Editorial Board, PLoSMed. 2012–2015 Editorial Board, International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health. 2008–2010 Member, Lancet Water and Sanitation Expert Group.

Memberships in Professional Organizations

2015 to date Member and Freeman of the Worshipful Company of Plumbers. 2013 to date Member, Water Environment Federation (WEF). 2013 to date Member, American Water Works Association (AWWA). 2010 to date Member, Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors. 2001 to date Fellow of the Royal Society for Public Health (FRSPH) (formerly, 2001–2008, Fellow

of the Royal Institute of Public Health). Member of ‘John Snow Society’. 1993 to date Member, International Water Association (and formerly of precursor organizations

IAWQ and IWSA). Other

membership Rural Water Supply Network (2009 to date); Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (1998 to date).

2012–2018 Certified by eminence as a Board-certified Environmental Scientist member of the American Academy of Environmental Engineers and Scientists (AAEE/BCES).

Committees 2018 to date Member of External Scientific Committee for the Certificate of Advanced Studies in

Water Sanitation and Hygiene of a consortium of Swiss Universities (University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland, Eawag and UNI-Neuchâtel).

2018 to date External Examiner, MSc in Water Science, Policy and Management, University of Oxford.

2017 to date Member, International Scientific Advisory Board for the MSc in Global Health (Risk Management and Hygiene Policies) of the University of Bonn.

2016 to date Member of US Technical Advisory Group to ISO / PC 305: Sustainable non-Sewered Sanitation Systems.

2016 to date Member of Global Monitoring Harmonisation Task Team of the Sanitation and Water for All Alliance.

2015 to date Member of WHO/UNICEF JMP/GLAAS Strategic Advisory Group. 2014 to date Working group member and peer reviewer for UK Department of Health Technical

Memorandum HTM 04-01 (healthcare specific water safety guidance). 2013 to date Member of US Technical Advisory Group to ISO TC 282 on water re-use. 2012 to date Member, Scientific Committee, annual International Water and Health Seminar

Cannes, France, 4th (11–13 June 2012); 5th (10–12 June 2013), 6th (16–18 June 2014), 7th (29 June–1 July 2015), 8th (27–29 June 2016), 9th (26–28 June 2017) and 10th (25–27 June 2018) seminars.

2012 to date Member of the Program Quality Review Panel (the external panel member) for the Master’s of Integrated Water Management of the International WaterCentre (IWC), a joint venture between Monash University, the University of Queensland, the University of Western Australia and Griffith University (Australia).

2010 to date Member of UNC SPH ESE Environmental Engineering Group. 2010 to date Member of UNC SPH Global Health Advisory Committee. 2010 to date Manager, on behalf of WHO and UNICEF, of communications activities of the

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International Network on Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage, of which UNC is also a member.

2017–2018 Chair, Science Advisory Board for the State of North Carolina (established by the state governor under the auspices of the secretaries of state for environmental quality and for health and human services).

2017–2018 Campaign Faculty Ambassador of the Gillings School of Global Public Health for the UNC “Campaign for Carolina”.

2017–2018 Member of External Review Panel for the SDG 6 Synthesis Report 2018 on Water and Sanitation.

2017–2018 Conference Director for UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, Chapel Hill, 29th October–2nd November, 2018.

2017–2018 Conference Co-director for UNC Water Microbiology Conference, Chapel Hill, 22–25 May 2018.

2017–2018 Conference Co-director (with Felix Dodds) for UNC Nexus: Water, Food, Energy and Climate Conference, Chapel Hill, 16–18 April 2018.

2015–2018 Member “Guidelines Development Group” for WHO Sanitation and Health Guidelines.

2015–2018 Member of UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health Distinguished Professorships Review Committee.

2014–2018 Member, Thematic Advisory Group to WHO on its project “Building adaptation to climate change in health in least developed countries through resilient WASH” conducted in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nepal and Tanzania.

2009–2018 Member of America's Health Rankings Scientific Advisory Committee. 2016–2017 Conference Director for UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets

policy, Chapel Hill, 16–20 October 2017. 2016–2017 Conference Co-director for UNC Water Microbiology Conference, Chapel Hill, 15–17

May 2017 and for co-hosted IWA International Symposium on Health-Related Water Microbiology May 15 – 19 2017.

2016 Member of committee for five-year review of UNC Global Research Institute. 2015–2016 Member of UNC Environment Initiative Task Force (convened by Provost and Vice-

Chancellor for Research to advise on campus-wide initiative). 2015–2016 Conference Director for UNC conference Water for Health: where science meets

policy, Chapel Hill, 10–14 October 2016. 2015–2016 Conference Co-director for UNC Water Microbiology conference, Chapel Hill, 17–19

May 2016. 2014–2015 Conference Director for UNC conference Water for Health: where science meets

policy, Chapel Hill, 26–30 October 2015. 2014–2015 Conference Co-director for UNC Water Microbiology conference Chapel Hill, 18–21

May 2015. 2014–2015 Member of UNC Task Force on Gifts and Sponsored Projects. 2013–2015 Sanitation and Water for All Steering Committee member. 2012–2015 Co-chair of the Steering Committee for the first UNC campus-wide theme, ‘Water in

Our World’. 2012–2015 US Water Partnership: member of Steering Committee; chair of Membership

Committee; and member of Signature Initiatives Committee. 2009–2015 Member of NSF-International Council of Public Health Consultants. 2013–2014 Conference Director for UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets

policy, Chapel Hill, October 2014. 2013–2014 Conference Co-director for UNC Water Microbiology Conference, Chapel Hill, 5–7

May 2014. 2013–2014 Conference Co-director (with Felix Dodds) for UNC Nexus 2014: Water, Food,

Climate and Energy Conference, Chapel Hill, 3–7 March 2014. 2012–2014 Member, Institute of Medicine Roundtable on Environmental Health Sciences,

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Research and Medicine. 2012–2013 Budapest Water Summit drafting group. 2012–2013 Member of Pan-American Health Organization Technical Advisory Group on

Cholera Elimination in Hispaniola. 2012–2013 Member of WHO–UNICEF Task Force on Development of Targets and Indicators

for Global Access to Drinking-water and Sanitation Post-2015. Member of working groups on drinking-water and on equity and non-discrimination.

2012–2013 Conference Director for UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, Chapel Hill, 14-18 October 2013.

2011–2013 Member of International Steering Committee for International Conference Towards Sustainable Safe Drinking Water Supply in Developing Countries: The Challenges of Geogenic Contaminants and Mitigation Measures 4–6 February 2013, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

2011–2013 Member of Suez Environnement Water Environment and Health Advisory Council. The committee concluded its work in 2013.

2010–2013 Member of Suez Environnement Foresight Advisory Council (FAC). The committee was discontinued in 2013.

2010–2012 Member of Oklahoma University “WaTER” (Water Technologies for Emerging Regions) Center Advisory Board.

2011–2012 Chair of the Programme Committee of IWA Water Safety Conference, Kampala, Uganda, November 2012.

2011–2012 Conference Director for UNC Conference Water for Health: science policy and innovation, Chapel Hill, 29 October–2 November 2012.

2010–2012 Member of UNC SPH ESE Academic Programs Committee. 2009–2012 Member, Peepoople Advisory Board. 2010–2011 Conference co-Director for UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets

policy, Chapel Hill, 3–7 October 2011, implemented in cooperation with Institute for the Environment.

2010–2011 Member of Technical Programme Committee, 2nd IWA Development Congress, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 21–24 November 2011.

2010 WHO and UNICEF JMP Task Force on Monitoring Access to Safe Drinking-water. 2009–2010 Conference co-Director. Conceived UNC Conference Water for Health: where

science meets policy, Chapel Hill, 25–28 October 2010, implemented in cooperation with Institute for the Environment.

2009–2010 Chair, Program Committee, IWA International Conference on Water Safety, Malaysia, 2010.

2008–2010 Member, Strategic Advisory Panel to University of Surrey on water and environment issues.

2005–2009 Member, WHO Publishing Policy Review Group. 2007–2009 Member of the Steering Committee for the Global Public Policy Network on Water

Management (GPPN). 2006–2009 Chair (2008–2009) and Alternate Chair (2006–2007) of WHO Global Reassignment

Committee. 2008–2009 University of Bristol, Department of Civil Engineering Strategic Advisory Committee. 2007–2009 Scientific Advisory Council Member, ‘SPLASH’ (European Water Initiative, European

Research Area Network). 2004–2009 Member of University of Loughbrough, UK, Advisory Committee to (annual) WEDC

international conferences. 1999–2009 Representative of WHO to ACC SWR and subsequently ‘UN-Water’.

2008 Member, Sanitation Financing Facility Group (led by the NGO ‘Ashoka’). 2007–2008 Chair, Programme Committee IRAR-IWA-WHO International Conference on Water

Safety Plans. May 2008, Lisbon, Portugal. 2007–2008 Member of Advisory Group to World Health Report 2008: Primary Health Care.

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2007–2008 USA Institute of Medicine Forum on Environmental Health Sciences. 2007–2008 USA Institute of Medicine Forum on Microbial Health Threats. 2004–2006 Member of University of Loughbrough, UK IDE Advisory Board. 2004–2005 Member of UN Millennium Task Force on Water and Sanitation.

2003 Member, OECD-organised ‘CSD round table’ preparatory to CSD12. 2002–2003 USEPA Candidate Contaminant List Advisory Group. 2001–2003 Member of International Advisory Board, IRC, the Netherlands. 1997–1998 Chair, Programme Committee, NSF-International Conference on Small Water

Systems, May 1998, Washington DC USA. 1991–1996 Technical Coordinator for updating of WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality

Volume 3: Surveillance and Control of Community Supplies. 1993–1995 GEMS/Water Steering Committee Member. 1993–1995 Environmental Advisory Committee to Farnborough College of Technology. 1993–1994 Member, Institution of Environmental Health Officers Expert Group on Recreational

Water Quality. 1994 Member of validation panel for MSc in Environmental Management at St. Mary’s

College, Strawberry Hill, UK.

Publications (* signifies student or post-doctoral researcher advisee)

Summary as of December 2018: Papers in peer-reviewed journals: 173 Authorship of books and published reports: 23 Editorship of books and published reports: 30 Authorship of book chapters: 61 Published conference proceedings: 37

Indicators (from Google Scholar):

Citations: 26,143 (15,198 since 2013)

H factor: 62 (52 since 2013)

!10-index: 171 (144 since 2013)

M quotient 1.9 (1986–2018)

Publications in peer-reviewed journals

Accepted or published pending page details

Global Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Research Priorities and Learning Challenges under Sustainable Development Goal 6. Karen Setty*, Alejandro Jiménez, Juliet Willetts, Mats Leifels,

Jamie Bartram. Accepted by Development Policy Review 21 Nov 2018. https://doi.org/10.1111/dpr.12415

Improving Environmental Conditions for Involuntarily Displaced Populations: water, sanitation, and hygiene in orphanages, prisons, and refugee and IDP settlements. Nikki Behnke*, Ryan Cronk*, Marielle Snel, Michelle Moffa*, Raymond Tu, Brandie Banner, Caroline Folz, Darcy Anderson*,

Alison McIntyre, Eric Stowe, and Jamie Bartram. Accepted by J Water Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 11 Feb 2018. https://doi.org/10.2166/washdev.2018.019

Microbial Contamination of Non-Household Drinking Water Sources: a systematic review. Lydia S.

Abebe*, Andrew J. Karon, Andrew J. Koltun, Ryan Cronk*, Robert Bain, Jamie Bartram. Accepted by J Water Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 24 April 2018. DOI: 10.2166/washdev.2018.080

Published

Impact of Drinking-Water, Sanitation and Hand Washing with Soap on Childhood Diarrhoeal

Disease: an updated systematic review, meta-analysis and -regression. Wolf J, Hunter P,

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Freeman M, Cumming O, Clasen T, Bartram J, Higgins JPT, Johnston R, Medlicott K, Boisson S

and Prüss-Ustün A. Trop Med Internat Health 23 (5) May 2018 pp508-525. doi 10.1111/tmi.13051

Time Series Study of Weather, Water Quality and Acute Gastroenteritis at Water Safety Plan Implementation Sites in France and Spain. Karen Setty*, Jerome Enault, Jean-Francois Loret,

Claudia Puigdomenech Serra, Jordi Martin and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2018 May; 221(4): 714-726. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.04.001

Identifying Opportunities to Improve Piped Water Continuity and Water System Monitoring in Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama: evidence from bayesian networks and regression analysis.

Cronk R* and Bartram J. J Cleaner Production Vol 196, 20 September 2018, pp1–10.

Consumer Perceptions and Purchasing of Packaged Water Products: a health belief model analysis in Sierra Leone. Ashley R. Williams*, Mohamed F. Jalloh; Mohammad B. Jalloh; Paul

Sengeh; and Jamie K. Bartram. Pan African Medical Journal. 2018; 30:262. doi:10.11604/pamj.2018.30.262.13676.

Improving Monitoring and Water Point Functionality in Rural Ethiopia. Carmen Anthonj*, Lisa

Fleming, Ryan Cronk*, Samuel Godfrey, Argaw Ambelu, Jane Bevan, Emanuele Sozzi, Jamie

Bartram. Water 2018, 10 (11), 1591; doi:10.3390/w10111591.

Pathways to Sustainability: a fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis of rural water supply

programs. Sara Marks, Emily Kumpel, Jean Guo, Jamie Bartram, Jenna Davis. J Cleaner Production 205 (2018) 789–798.

Health Risk Perceptions are Associated with Domestic use of Basic Water and Sanitation Services. evidence from rural Ethiopia. Anthonj C*, Fleming L, Godfrey, S, Ambelu A, Bevan J; Cronk R* and

Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 2112; doi:10.3390/ijerph15102112

Assessing Operational Performance Benefits of a Water Safety Plan Implemented in South-

western France. Setty, K. E.*, O’Flaherty, G.*, Enault, J., Loret, J.F. and Bartram, J. Perspectives in Public Health Vol 138 No 5, pp 270–278 Sept 2018. DOI: 10.1177/1757913918787846

Pro-poor Governance in Water and Sanitation Service Delivery: evidence from global analysis and

assessment sanitation and drinking water surveys. David Fuente and Jamie Bartram. Perspectives in Public Health Vol 138 Issue 5 pp261 – 269, July 17 2018. https://doi.org/10.1177/1757913918788109

The Role of Energy in Health Facilities: a conceptual framework and complementary data

assessment in Malawi. Suhlrie L, Bartram J, Burns J, Joca L*, Tomaro J, Rehfuess E (2018) PLoS ONE 13(7): e0200261. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0200261

Evidence Based Decision-making and Water Providers in Malawi Ecuador and Brazil. Amjad U*;

Dalcanale F*, Kayser G*, Bentley M and Bartram J. Water Policy 20 (2018) 530–545. DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.184

Perceptions of Risks Posed by Climate Change among Water Sector Professionals in Sub-Saharan Africa: insights from the 2016 African Water Association Congress. Fuente D, Connolly K*,

Mwaura M and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health Volume 221, Issue 5, June 2018, pp 838–846. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.04.007.

Policy Review of the Means of Implementation Targets and Indicators for the Sustainable

Development Goal for Water and Sanitation. Bartram J, Brocklehurst B, Bradley D, Muller M and Evans B. npj Clean Water volume 1, Article number: 3 (2018) doi:10.1038/s41545-018-0003-0

Environmental Conditions in Health Care Facilities in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: coverage

and inequalities. Cronk R* and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2018 Apr 1; 221(3): 409–422.

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A Systematic Literature Review of the Enabling Environment Elements to Promote Implementation

of Water Safety Plans in High-Income Countries. Baum R* and Bartram J. Journal of Water and Health. 2018 Feb 1; 16(1): 14–24.

Evaluation of Two Enzymatic Substrates 5-Bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl β-D-glucuronide and Resorufin β-D-glucuronide for Rapid Detection of E. coli in Water. Jianyong Wu*, Jill R. Stewart, Mark D.

Sobsey, Chris Cormency, Jamie K. Bartram. Current Microbiology (2018)

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-018-1454-8.

Seasonality, Water Use and Community Management of Water Systems in Rural Settings: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly*, Katherine F. Shields, Ryan

Cronk*, Kristen Lee, Nikki Behnke*, Tori Klug*, Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 628–629, 1 July 2018, pp715–721. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.045

Carrying Water may be a Major Contributor to Disability from Musculoskeletal Disorders in Low Income Countries: a cross-sectional survey in South Africa, Ghana and Vietnam. Jo-Anne Geere,

Jamie Bartram, Laura Bates, Leslie Danquah, Barbara Evans, Michael Fisher*, Nora Groce, Batsirai Majuru, Michael M Mokoena, Murembiwa S Mukhola, Nguyen Viet Hung, Pham Duc Phuc, Ashley Rhoderick Williams*, Wolf-Peter Schmidt and Paul R Hunter. J Global Health 2018 8(1) doi: 10.7189/jogh.08.010406.

A categorization of water system breakdowns: evidence from Liberia, Nigeria, Tanzania, and

Uganda. Ryan Cronk*, Tori Klug*; Katherine F Shields; Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 619–620, 1 April 2018, pp 1126–1132.

Community-led Total Sanitation: a mixed-methods systematic review of evidence and its quality.

Venkataramanan V*, Crocker J*, Karon AJ and Bartram J. Environ Health Perspect 126(2), February 2018; DOI:10.1289/EHP1965.

Multiple household water sources and their use in remote communities with evidence from Pacific Island communities. Mark Elliott, Morgan C. MacDonald, Terence Chan, Annika Kearton, Katherine

F. Shields, Jamie K. Bartram, Wade L. Hadwen. Water Resources Research 53(11) 9106-9117 (2017). DOI: 10.1002/2017WR021047.

A systematic review of nosocomial waterborne infection in neonates and mothers. Michelle Moffa,

Wilson Guo, Trudy Li, Ryan Cronk, Lydia Abebe, Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 2017 Nov: 220(8): 1199-1206. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.07.011.

Factors influencing water system functionality in Nigeria and Tanzania: a regression and Bayesian

network analysis. Ryan Cronk* and Jamie Bartram. Environ Sci Technol, 2017, 51 (19), pp

11336–11345. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b03287.

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in rural health care facilities: a cross-sectional study in Ethiopia,

Kenya, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia. Guo, Amy*; Bowling, James; Bartram,

Jamie; Kayser, Georgia*. Am J Trop Med Hyg Volume 97, Issue 4, Oct 2017, p. 1033 – 1042; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.17-0208

National drinking water targets - trends and factors associated with target setting. Luh J* Ojomo

E*, Evans B and Bartram J (2017). Water Policy, 19 (5) 851-866; DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.108.doi:10.2166/wp.2017.10

Factors Associated with Cholera in Kenya, 2008-2013. Gretchen Cowman, Shikanga O-tipo, Ian

Njeru, Thomas Achia, Jackson Kioko, Harsha Thirumurthy, Jamie Bartram. Pan-African Medical Journal. 2017;28:101. doi:10.11604/pamj.2017.28.101.12806.

Multiple household water sources and their use in remote communities with evidence from Pacific

Island Countries. Elliott, M., MacDonald, M. C., Chan, T., Kearton, A., Shields, K. F., Bartram, J.

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K., and Hadwen, W. L. (2017). Water Resources Research, 53, 9106–9117. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017WR021047

The role of social capital and sense of ownership in rural community-managed water systems: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly*, Kristen Lee*, Katherine F

Shields, Ryan Cronk*, Nikki Behnke*, Tori Klug*, Jamie Bartram. Journal of Rural Studies 2017 (56) 156–166.

Sanitation Marketing: A Systematic Review and Theoretical Critique Using the Capability Approach.

Barrington DJ, Souter RT, Sridharan S, Shields KF, Saunders SG and Bartram JK. Soc Sci Medicine 194 (2017) 128–134. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.10.021

Protect public health by making water services resilient in a changing climate. J Bartram, J Jason West and G Howard. BMJ Opinion, October 18th 2017.

Temporal and Thematic Trends in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WaSH) Research in Pacific Island Countries: A Systematic Review [Review]. Morgan C. MacDonald, Terence Chan, Mark

Elliott, Annika Kearton, Kate Shields, Dani Barrington, Regina Souter, Bronwyn Powell, Jamie

Bartram, and Wade L. Hadwen. J Water Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 07.3 (2017): 352–368.

Sustainability of community-led total sanitation outcomes: Evidence from Ethiopia and Ghana.

Crocker J*, Saywell D and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2017 May; 220(3): 551–557. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.02.011.

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools: status and implications of low coverage in Ethiopia,

Kenya, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda, and Zambia. Morgan C*, Bowling JM, Bartram J and Kayser G*. Int J Hyg Environ Health 220 (2017) 950-959. doi:10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.03.015.

Water quality, compliance and health outcomes among utilities implementing Water Safety Plans in France and Spain. Karen E Setty*, Georgia L Kayser*, Michael Bowling, Jerome Enault, Jean-

Francois Loret, Claudia Puigdomenech Serra, Jordi Martin Alonso, Arnau Pla Mateu and Jamie

Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 2017 220 (2017) 513–530.

The true costs of participatory sanitation: evidence from community-led total sanitation studies in

Ghana and Ethiopia. Crocker J*, Saywell D, Shields K, Kolsky P and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 601–602 (2017) 1075–1083.

Water system hardware and management rehabilitation qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Tori Klug*, Kate Shields, Ryan Cronk*, Emma Kelly*, Nikki Behnke*, Kristen Lee* and

Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438-4639(16)30388-1. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.02.009.

Resource mobilization for community-managed rural water systems: evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Nikki L. Behnke*, Tori Klug*, Ryan Cronk*, Katherine F. Shields, Kristen Lee*, Emma

R. Kelly*, Greg Allgood, and Jamie Bartram. J Cleaner Production 156 (2017) 437–444. doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.04.016

Expert Assessment of the Resilience of Drinking Water and Sanitation Systems to Climate-related

Hazards. Luh J, Royster S, Sebastian D, Ojomo E* and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 592 (2017) 334–344. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.084

A systematic review of waterborne infections from nontuberculous mycobacteria in health care

facility water systems. Trudy Li, Lydia S. Abebe*, Ryan Cronk*, Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438–4639(16)30574-0 doi: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.ijheh.2016.12.002

On-plot Drinking Water Supplies and Health: A Systematic Review. Alycia Overbo*, Ashley R

Williams*; Barbara Evans, Paul Hunter and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 219, issues 4-5 (2016), 317–330. doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2016.04.008.

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Rio water quality highlights global public health concern over untreated sewage disposal –

Comment. Joseph N.S. Eisenberg; Jamie Bartram; and Timothy J. Wade Environ Health Perspect; 2016, DOI:10.1289/EHP662.

Building capacity for water, sanitation, and hygiene programming: training evaluation theory applied to CLTS management training in Kenya. Crocker J*, Shields KF, Venkataramanan V*, Saywell D

and Bartram J. Social Science & Medicine Volume 166, October 2016, pp 66–76. doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.08.008.

Impact evaluation of training natural leaders during a community-led total sanitation intervention: a cluster-randomized field trial in Ghana. Crocker, Jonny*; Abodoo, Elvis; Asamani, Daniel;

Domapielle, William; Gyapong, Benedict; Bartram, Jamie. Environ. Sci. Technol., 2016, 50 (16),

pp 8867–8875. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b01557.

Investigating multiple household water sources and uses with a computer assisted personal interviewing (CAPI) survey. Morgan MacDonald, Mark Elliott, Terence Chan, Annika Kearton, Kate

Shields, Jamie Bartram, Wade Hadwen. Water, 2016, 8(12), 574; doi:10.3390/w8120574.

The Flint water crisis confirms that US drinking water needs improved risk management. Baum,

Rachel*; Bartram, Jamie; Hrudey, Steve. Environ. Sci. Technol., 2016, 50 (11), pp 5436–5437.

DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b02238.

Teachers and sanitation promotion: an assessment of community-led total sanitation in Ethiopia.

Crocker Jonathan*; Abiyot Geremew, BS; Fisseha Atalie, MA; Messele Yetie, MA; Jamie Bartram. Environ Sci Technol 2016 Jun 21;50 (12):6517-25. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.6b01021

Chemical Quality and Regulatory Compliance of Drinking Water in Iceland. Gunnarsdottir M,

Gardarsson SM, St Jonsson J and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2016 Nov; 219(8):724-733. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2016.09.011.

Climate change and water and sanitation: likely impacts and emerging trends for action. Guy

Howard, Roger Calow, Alan Macdonald and Jamie Bartram. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 41(1) pp 253–276. November 2016. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-110615-085856.

Literature Review of Associations Among Attributes of Reported Drinking Water Disease Outbreak

Characteristics. Grant Ligon* and Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 2016 May 27;13(6). pii: E527. doi: 10.3390/ijerph13060527.

Adapting Drinking Water Systems to Coastal Climate Change: Evidence from Viet Nam and the

Philippines. Ojomo E* and Bartram J. Reg. Environ. Change, 2016. Regional Environmental Change, 16(8), 2409-2418 doi:10.1007/s101 13-016-0965-8.

Improving community health through marketing exchanges: insights from a Participatory Action Research study on water, sanitation, and hygiene in three Melanesian countries. Barrington, D.J.,

Sridharan, S., Saunders, S.G., Souter, R.T., Bartram, J., Shields, K.F., Meo, S., Kearton, A., Hughes, R.K. Social Science & Medicine 171C (2016) pp. 84–93.

Water Safety Plans: Bridges and Barriers to Implementation in North Carolina. Amjad UQ*, Luh J*,

Baum R* and Bartram J. J Water Health 14 (5) 816-826; DOI: 10.2166/wh.2016.011.

Interpreting the Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS) Findings on Sanitation, Hygiene, and

Diarrhea. Crocker J* and Bartram J (2016) PLoS Med 13(5): e1002011. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002011.

Addressing WaSH challenges in Pacific Island Countries: A participatory marketing systems mapping approach to empower informal settlement community action. Saunders S, Barrington D,

Sridharan S, Meo S, Hadwen W, Shields K, Souter R and Bartram J. Habitat International 55 (2016) 159–166.

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Indicators for monitoring water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools: A systematic review of indicator

selection methods. Schwemlein S*, Conk R* and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 2016, 13, 333. doi: 10.3390/ijerph/13030333

Drinking water and sanitation: progress in 73 countries towards in relation to socioeconomic

indicators. Jeanne Luh* and Jamie Bartram. Bull World Health Organ 2016; 94 111–121A doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.15.162974.

Assessing Progress towards Public Health, Human Rights and International Development Goals

Using Frontier Analysis. Luh J*, Cronk R* and Bartram J. (2016). PLoS ONE 11(1) e0147663 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147663.

Systems approaches to studying water and diarrheal diseases in developing countries under

climate change. Jonathan Mellor, Karen Levy, Julie Zimmerman, Mark Elliott, Jamie Bartram, Elizabeth Carlton, Thomas Clasen, Rebecca Dillingham, Joseph Eisenberg, Richard Guerrant, Daniele Lantagne, James Mihelcic and Kara Nelson. Science of the Total Environment Vols548–549 pp 82–90. April 2016.

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Fecal Contamination and Inadequate Treatment of

Packaged Drinking Water. Williams A, Bain R, Fisher M*, Cronk R*, Kelly E* and Bartram J. PLoS ONE 2015. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140899.

Vulnerability assessment for loss of access to drinking water due to extreme weather events. Jeanne Luh*, Elizabeth C. Christenson, Aizhan Toregozhina, David A. Holcomb, Tucker Witsil,

Laura R. Hamrick, Edema Ojomo* and Jamie Bartram. Climatic Change 133(4) 665 –679, 2015.

Association of Supply Type with Fecal Contamination of Source Water and Household Stored Drinking-water in Developing Countries: a bivariate meta-analysis. Katherine Shields, Rob Bain,

Ryan Cronk*, Jim Wright and Jamie Bartram. Environ Health Perspect. 123 (12) 1222–1231, Dec 2015. DOI:10.1289/ehp.1409002.

Evaluation of an inexpensive growth medium for direct detection of Escherichia coli in temperate and sub-tropical waters. Rob Bain, Claire Woodall, John Elliott, Benjamin F. Arnold, Roz Tung,

Rob Morley, Martella du Preez, Jamie Bartram, Anthony Davis, Stephen Gundry and Stephen Pedley. PLoS ONE Published 23 Oct 2015. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140997

Understanding Handpump Sustainability: Determinants of Rural Water Source Functionality in the Greater Afram Plains Region of Ghana. Michael B. Fisher*; Katherine Shields; Terence U Chan; Elizabeth Christenson; Ryan D. Cronk*; Hannah Leker; Destina Samani; Patrick Apoya; Alexandra

Lutz; Jamie Bartram. Water Resources Research Volume 51, Issue 10

October 2015, Pages 8431–8449. DOI: 10.1002/2014WR016770.

An Examination of the Potential Added Value of Water Safety Plans to the United States National

Drinking Water Legislation. Rachel Baum*, Urooj Amjad*, Jeanne Luh* and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 677–685 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2014.12.004.

Monitoring Drinking-water Sanitation and Hygiene in non-Household Settings: Priorities for Policy

and Practice. Ryan Cronk*, Tom Slaymaker and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 694–703 DOI information: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2015.03.003

Sustainability and Scale-up of Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage Practices: enablers

and barriers to effective implementation. Edema Ojomo*, Mark Elliot*, Michael Forson and Jamie

Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015) 704–713.

Tracking Progress towards Global Drinking-water and Sanitation targets: a within- and among-

country analysis. Fuller J, Goldstick J, Bartram J and Eisenberg JNS. Science of the Total

Environment 10/2015; 541:857–864. DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.09.130.

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Climate Change Preparedness: A Knowledge Attitudes and Practices Study in Southern Nigeria.

Ojomo E*, Elliott M; Amjad, U and Bartram J. Environments 2015, 2, 435–448; doi:10.3390/environments2040435.

Natural background levels for chemicals in Icelandic aquifers. Maria J. Gunnarsdottir*, Sigurdur M.

Gardarsson, Gunnar St. Jonsson, Halldor Armannsson and Jamie Bartram. Hydrology Research 46.4 (2015) 647–660 doi: 10.2166/nh.2014.123.

Microbial and chemical quality of packaged, sachet water and stored household water in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Michael B. Fisher*; Ashley R. Williams; Mohamed Jalloh; George Saquee; Robert E.

S. Bain; Jamie K. Bartram. 2015. PLoS ONE 10(7): e0131772. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0131772.

A controlled, before-after trial of an urban sanitation intervention to reduce enteric infections in children: research protocol for the Maputo Sanitation (MapSan) study, Mozambique. Brown, Joe,

Oliver Cumming, Jamie Bartram, Sandy Cairncross, Jeroen Ensink, David Holcomb, Peter Kolsky, Jackie Knee, Kaida Liang, Song Liang, Rassul Nala, Guy Norman, Richard Rheingans, Jill Stewart, Olimpio Zavale, Valentina Zuin, Wolf-Peter Schmidt. BMJ Open 2015;5:e008215. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008215.

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools in low socio-economic regions in Nicaragua: a cross-sectional survey. Tania Jordanova, Ryan Cronk*, Wanda Obando, Octavio Zeledon Medina, Rinko

Kinoshita and Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 6197–6217; doi:10.3390/ijerph120606197.

Lack of Toilets and Safe Water in Health-care Facilities (editorial). Jamie Bartram, Ryan Cronk*, Maggie Montgomery, Bruce Gordon, Maria Neira, Edward Kelley and Yael Velleman. Bull World Health Organ. April 2015. 2015; 93:210 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.15.154609.

Sustainability, Scalability and Enabling Environment: A framework for their implementation in

drinking water supply. Urooj Amjad*, Edema Ojomo*, Kristen Downs, Ryan Cronk* and Jamie

Bartram. Water (2015), 7, 1497–1514; doi: 10.3390/w7041497

Seasonal variation of fecal contamination in drinking water sources in developing countries: a

systematic review. Caroline Kostyla*, Rob Bain, Ryan Cronk*, and Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment 514 (2015) pp 333–343. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.01.018.

Drinking Water Quality Governance: A Comparative Case Study of Brazil, Ecuador, and Malawi.

Kayser, G.L.*, Amjad, U.Q.*, Dalcanale, F.*, Bartram, J. and Bentley, P. Env Sci and Policy 48 (2015)186–195.

Developing a National Framework for Safe Drinking water – case study of Iceland. Maria J.

Gunnarsdottir*, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015) pp196–202.

Does Global Progress on Sanitation Really Lag behind Water? An Analysis of Global Progress on Community- and Household-level Access to Safe Water and Sanitation. Cumming O, Elliott M,

Overbo A*, Bartram J, 2014. PLoS ONE 9(12): e114699. Doi10.1371/journal.pone.0114699.

Global Monitoring of Water Supply and Sanitation: A critical review of history, methods, and future

challenges. Jamie Bartram, Clarissa Brocklehurst, Mike Fisher*, Rolf Luyendijk, Rifat Hossain, Tessa Wardlaw, and Bruce Gordon. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11, 8137-8165; doi:10.3390/ijerph110808137.

Comparison and Cost Analysis of Drinking Water Quality Monitoring Requirements versus Practice

in Seven Developing Countries. Crocker J* and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11, 7333–7346; doi:10.3390/ijerph110707333.

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Water Quality Laboratories in Colombia: a GIS-based study of urban and rural accessibility. Wright

J, Liu J, Bain R, Perez A, Crocker J*, Bartram J and Gundry S. Science of the Total Environment 2013 485 643–652.

Rural: Urban Inequalities in post-2015 Targets and Indicators for Drinking Water (Scientific

Commentary). Bain R, Wright J, Christenson E* and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 490 (2014) 509–513.

Sustainability Check: five-year annual suitability audits of water supply and open defecation free status in the One Million Initiative, Mozambique. Godfrey S, van der Velden M, Muianga A, Xavier

A, Downs K* and Bartram J. J Water Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 4(1) pp471–483, 2014.

Examining the Influence of Urban definition when assessing the Relative Safety of Drinking water in

Nigeria. Christenson E*, Bain R, Wright J, Aondoakaa S, Hossain R, and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 490 (2014) 301–312.

Translating the Human Right to Water and Sanitation into Public Policy Reform. Benjamin Mason Meier, Georgia Lyn Kayser*Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, Urooj Quezon Amjad*, Fernanda

Dalcanale* and Jamie Bartram. Sci and Eng Ethics 120–136 (2014).

Burden of diarrhoeal disease from inadequate water, sanitation and hygiene in low- and middle-

income settings: a retrospective analysis of data from 145 countries. Annette Prüss-Ustün, Jamie

Bartram, Thomas Clasen, John M. Colford, Jr., Oliver Cumming, Valerie Curtis, Sophie Bonjour, Alan D. Dangour, Jennifer De France, Lorna Fewtrell, Matthew C. Freeman, Bruce Gordon, Paul R. Hunter, Richard B. Johnston, Colin Mathers, Daniel Mäusezahl, Kate Medlicott, Maria Neira, Meredith Stocks, Jennyfer Wolf, Sandy Cairncross. Trop Med Internat Hyg. 19(8) pp894–905, 2014. According to Altmetric this paper was in the 99th percentile in terms of ‘online attention’ out of 2.3 million articles that it tracks; and was the most highly commented ever paper in this journal.

Assessing the impact of drinking water and sanitation on diarrheal disease in low- and middle-income settings: a systematic review and meta-regression. Jennyfer Wolf, Annette Prüss-Ustün,

Oliver Cumming, Jamie Bartram, Sophie Bonjour, Sandy Cairncross, Tom Clasen, John M. Colford, Valerie Curtis, J. De France, L. Fewtrell, M Freeman, B. Gordon, P. Hunter, A Jeandron, R. Johnston, D Mausezahl, C Mathers, M Neira and J. Higgins (2014). Trop Med Internat Health 19(8) pp928–942, 2014.

Global assessment of exposure to fecal-contamination through drinking-water based on a systematic review. Robert Bain, Ryan Cronk*, Rifat Hossain, Sophie Bonjour, Kyle Onda*, Jim

Wright, Hong Yang, Slaymaker T, Hunter P, Annette Pruess Ustun, and Jamie Bartram. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 19(8) pp917–927, 2014. According to Altmetric this paper in the 99th percentile in terms of ‘online attention’ out of 2.3 million articles that it tracks; and was the second most highly commented ever paper in this journal.

Fecal Contamination of Drinking-water in Low- and Middle-income Countries: A Systematic Review

and Meta-analysis. Bain R, Cronk R*, Wright J, Yang H, Slaymaker T and Bartram J. (2014). PLoS Med 11(5): e1001644. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001644.

Examining the Practice of Developing Human Rights Indicators to Facilitate Accountability for the Human Right to Water and Sanitation. Benjamin Mason Meier; Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum;

Georgia Lyn Kayser*; Urooj Quezon Amjad*; Jamie Bartram. Journal of Human Rights Practice 2014 6: 159−181. Also available at: http://jhrp.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/hut031?ijkey=nJA5qYvWzzxWZfA&keytype=ref.

Exposure to climate related hazards: a global assessment of population exposure to cyclone,

drought and flood. Elizabeth Christenson*, Mark Elliott*, Ovik Banerjee*, Laura Hamrick, Jamie

Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11(2), 2169−2192; doi:10.3390/ijerph110202169.

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Beyond direct impact: evidence synthesis towards a better understanding of effectiveness of public

health interventions. Rehfuess E and Bartram J. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 217 (2014) 155−159.

Country Clustering Applied to the Water and Sanitation Sector: A New Tool with Potential

Applications in Research and Policy. Kyle Onda*, Jonny Crocker*, Georgia Lyn Kayser* and Jamie

Bartram. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 217 (2014) 379− 385. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3946906.

Domestic Water and Sanitation as Water Security: monitoring, concepts and strategy. David

Bradley and Jamie Bartram. Phil Trans R Soc A 371: 20120420, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2012.0420.

Water Safety Plan Cost Analysis: explanation building with case studies in the Western Pacific

Region. Zai Kang Chang*, Mien Ling Chong and Jamie Bartram. Water Sci Tech: Water Supply 13(5) pp1358−1366, 2013.

Water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions to improve health among people living with HIV/AIDS: a systematic review. Rachel Peletz, Thomas Mahin, Mark Elliott, Mamie S Harris, Ka Seen Chan,

Myron S Cohen, Jamie K Bartram, Thomas F Clasen. AIDS (London, England). 10/2013; 27(16):2593−2601. DOI:10.1097/QAD.0b013e3283633a5f.

Domestic Water Service Delivery Indicators and Frameworks for Monitoring, Evaluation, Policy and

Planning: A Review. Kayser GL*, Moriarty P, Fonseca C and Bartram J. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2013; 10(10):4812−4835.

Developing a Global Strategy for Water and Health Using the DPSEEA Framework. Shields J* and

Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 09/2013 468−469C:306-314.

Universal access to Drinking-water: the role of aid. Rob Bain, Rolf Luyendijk and Jamie Bartram. WIDER Working Paper no. 2013/088. ISBN 978-92-9230-665-6.

Equity in Water and Sanitation: Developing an Index to Measure Progressive Realization of the

Human Right. Jeanne Luh*, Rachel Baum*, and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg and Environ Health 216 (2013) 662−671 2013.

Sanitation: A Global Estimate of Sewerage Connections without Treatment and the Resulting

Impact on MDG Progress Rachel Baum*, Jeanne Luh*, and Jamie Bartram. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47, pp1994−2000.

Implementing an Evolving Human Right through Water and Sanitation Policy. Meier B; Kayser G*;

Amjad U* and Bartram J. Water Policy 15 116–133, 2013.

Water safety and inequality in access to drinking-water between rich and poor households. Hong

Yang, Rob E.S. Bain, Jamie K Bartram, Stephen W. Gundry, Steve Pedley, Jim A. Wright. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47, 1222−1230.

Commentary on the Human Right to Sanitation: Should the Right to Community-wide Health be

won at the Cost of Individual Rights? Bartram J, Charles K, Evans B, O’Hanlon L and Pedley S. Journal of Water and Health Vol 10 No 4 pp 499–503, 2012, doi:10.2166/wh.2012.205.

Benefits of Water Safety Plans: Microbiology, Compliance and Public Health Maria J.

Gunnarsdottir*, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson, Mark Elliott*, Gudrun Sigmundsdottir and Jamie Bartram. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46, 7782−7789.

Water and Sanitation in Schools: a systematic review of the health and hygiene outcomes. Hughes

C*; Le, TP* and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9, 2772–2787; doi:10.3390/ijerph9082772.

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Getting Wet, Clean and Healthy: why households matter. Bartram J, Elliott M* and Chuang P. Lancet (commentary) 10 July 2012 doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60903–9.

A Summary Catalogue of Microbial Drinking-water Tests Classified by Resource Requirements.

Robert Bain, Jamie Bartram, Mark Elliott*, Lanakila McMahan, Robert Matthews, Patty Chuang, Rosalind Tung and Stephen Gundry. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9, 1609–1625; doi:10.3390/ijerph9051609.

Global Access to Safe Water: Accounting for Water Quality and the Resulting Impact on MDG

Progress. Kyle Onda*, Joe LoBuglio and Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9(3), 880–894; doi:10.3390/ijerph9030880. This article was re-printed as World Health and Population, 14(3) May 2013: 32–44. This was the second most downloaded IJERPH paper in 2012, with 3399 downloads and one of the most cited IJERPH papers from that year; in 2014 it remained the second most downloaded from that year.

Accounting for water quality in monitoring access to safe drinking-water as part of the Millennium Development Goals: lessons from five countries. Bain R, Gundry S, Wright J, Yang H, Pedley S,

Bartram J. Bull World Health Organ 2012; 90:228–235A. doi:10.2471/BLT.11.094284.

Comment on Randomized Intervention Study of Solar Disinfection of Drinking Water in the Prevention of Dysentery in Kenyan Children Aged under 5 Years (du Preez, M.; Conroy, R. M.; Ligondo, S.; Hennessy, J.; Elmore-Meegan, M.; Soita, A.; McGuigan, K. G. Environm. Sci. Technol.

2011). Paul Hunter, Jamie Bartram and Sandy Cairncross. Environ. Sci. Technol., 2012, 46 (5), pp 3035–3035.

Icelandic experience with water safety plans Maria J. Gunnarsdottir*, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson and

Jamie Bartram. Water Science and Technology 65.2, 2012 pp 277–288.

Assessing and managing fluorosis risk in children and adults in rural Madhya Pradesh, India Sam

Godfrey, Pawan Labhasetwar, Tapas Chakma, Satish Wate, Aditya Swami and Jamie Bartram. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development 01.2 pp136–143, 2011.

A Comparative Assessment of Institutional Frameworks for Managing Drinking Water Quality.

Zarah Rahman, Jonny Crocker*, Kang Chang*, Ranjiv Khush and Jamie Bartram. J Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 2011, 01.4 pp 242–258.

Regulations and perspectives on disinfection by-products: Importance of estimating total toxicity.

Sadahiko Itoh, Bruce A. Gordon, Philip Callan and Jamie Bartram. 2011. Journal of Water Supply: Research and Technology – Aqua, 60.5 pp 261–274.

Editorial. Jamie Bartram, Barbara Evans, Michael Hantke-Domas, Guy Howard, Guy Hutton and Marcos von Sperling (editorial by editors for the inaugural edition of the new Journal). Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development Vol 1 p1 June 2011.

How Health Professionals Can Lever Health Gains from Improved Water, Sanitation and Hygiene

Practices. Jamie Bartram and Jennifer Platt*, 2010 Vol 130 No 5 l Perspectives in Public Health (Special Edition on Water and Sanitation) pp 215–221. DOI: 10.1177/1757913910379193.

Hygiene, sanitation and water: forgotten foundations of health (Paper 1 in PLoS-Medicine Water

and Sanitation Series). Bartram J and Cairncross S, 2010. PLoS Med 7(11): 1000367.doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1000367. http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1000367

Hygiene, Sanitation and Water; what needs to be done? (Paper 4 in PLoS-Medicine Water and

Sanitation Series). Cairncross S, Bartram J, Cumming O and Brocklehurst C, 2010. PLoS Med 7(11): e1000365. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1000365 http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1000365

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Swimming upstream: why sanitation, hygiene and water are so important to mothers and their

daughters (editorial). Brocklehurst C and Bartram J. Bull World Health Organ 2010; 88:482

Securing 2020 vision for 2030: climate change and ensuring resilience in water and sanitation

services. Guy Howard; Katrina Charles; Kathy Pond; Anca Brookshaw; Rifat Hossain; and Jamie

Bartram. Journal of Water and Climate Change Vol 1 No 1, 2010 pp2–16.

Too Much or Too Little? A Review of the Conundrum of Selenium. Gore F*, Fawell J and Bartram

J. PMID: 20375470. Journal of Water and Health 08(3), 2010 pp 405–416.

Shortsightedness in sight-saving: half a strategy will not eliminate blinding trachoma (Editorial).

Montgomery M and Bartram J. PMID: 20428358. Bull World Health Organ 2010:88(2) p82.

More Health for Your Buck: Health Sector Functions to Secure Environmental Health. Rehfuess

EA, Bruce N and Bartram JK, 2009. PMID: 20072777. Bull WHO Vol 87 (11) pp880–882.

Comment on ‘Household Water Treatment in Poor Populations: Is There Enough Evidence for

Scaling Up Now’. Clasen T, Bartram J, Colford J, Luby S, Quick R and Sobsey M. Environ Sci Technol. 2009 Jul 15; 43 (14) pp5542–4. PMID: 19708394.

Increasing Functional Sustainability of Water and Sanitation Supplies in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa.

Montgomery, Maggie A.; Bartram, Jamie; Elimelech, Menachem. Environmental Engineering Science, May 2009, Vol. 26 (5), p1017–1023.

Improving on haves and have-nots. Bartram J. Nature Vol 452 (7185) No 20 pp283–284, March 2008. PMID: 18354459.

Sanitation: On- or Off-track? Issues of Monitoring Sanitation and the role of the Joint Monitoring

Programme. Cotton A and Bartram J. Waterlines 27 (1), 2008 pp 12–29.

Estimating causal effects using observational data: an alternative to randomized controlled trials. J Scott, J Bartram, L Haller, J Eisenberg. 2008. American Journal of Epidemiology 167 (11) pS45.

Flowing Away: Water and Health Opportunities (editorial). Bartram J. Bull WHO January 2008, 86 (1) p 2–3. PMID: 18235877. (One of the WHO Bulletin’s most downloaded editorials).

Global Costs of Attaining the Millennium Development Goal for Water Supply and Sanitation.

Hutton G and Bartram J. Bull WHO January 2008, 86 (1) pp13–19. PMID: 18235885.

La Sante Mondiale au fil de l’eau. Bartram J (invited). pp 86–89 Dossier pour la Science (French Edition of ‘Scientific American’) Janvier/Mars 2008.

Estimating the costs and health benefits of water and sanitation improvements at global level.

Haller L, Hutton G and Bartram J. Journal of Water and Health 5(4) pp 467–480, 2007. PMID: 17878561.

The Global Challenge of Water Quality and Health. Bartram J and Gordon B, 2008. Water Practice and Technology 3 (4) (no page numbers) doi: 10.2166/WPT.2008090.

Global Cost-benefit analysis of water supply and sanitation interventions. Hutton G, Haller L and

Bartram J. Journal of Water and Health 5(4) pp481–502, 2007. PMID: 17878562

Urban Environmental Health Hazards and Health Equity. Kjellstrom T, Friel S, Dixon J, Corvalan C,

Rehfuess E, Campbell-Lendrum D, Gore F* and Bartram J. J Urban Health. 2007 May; 84(Suppl 1): pp86–97. PMID: 17450427.

Modifiable Environmental Risks (Editorial). Neira M and Bartram J. Journal of Water and Health 5(2), pp1–2, 2007. PMID: 17674568.

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Cost-effectiveness of water quality interventions for preventing diarrhoeal disease in developing

countries. Clasen T, Haller L, Walker D, Bartram J and Cairncross S. Journal of Water and

Health Vol 5 No 4 pp599–608, 2007. PMID: 17878570.

An Attempt to Estimate the Global Burden of Disease due to Fluoride in Drinking-water. Fewtrell F,

Smith S, Kay D and Bartram J. J Water and Health Vol 4 No 4 (Dec 2006) pp533–542, 2006. PMID: 17176823.

Effective Water Supply Surveillance in Urban Areas of Developing Countries. Howard G and

Bartram J. J Water and Health Vol 3 No 1 pp 31–43, 2005. PMID: 15952451. (This was one of the most downloaded papers from this journal with 233 downloads as of May 2009,)

Focusing on improved water and sanitation for health. Bartram J, Lewis K, Lenton R and Wright A. Lancet Feb 26–Mar 4 2005; 365 (9461): 810–812. PMID: 15733725.

The New WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality: establishing comprehensive water safety

frameworks, Howard G and Bartram J. Waterlines 23 (4), April 2005, pp. 4–7.

The Effect of Irrigation and Large Dams on the Burden of Malaria on Global and Regional Scale. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (Am J Tr Med Hyg 72(4), 2005: 392-406)). Jennifer Keiser, Jürg Utzinger, Marcel Tanner, Marcia Caldas de Castro, Burton H. Singer, Michael

F. Maltese. Robert Bos, Jamie Bartram and Laurence Haller.

Heterotrophic Plate Count – IJFM Introduction. Bartram J, Cotruvo J, Dufour A, Hazan S, and Tanner B. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 92 (3): 239–240, 2004.

Heterotrophic Plate Count Measurement in Drinking-water Safety Management: Report of an

Expert Meeting, Geneva 24–25 April 2002. Bartram J, Cotruvo J, Exner M, Fricker C, Glasmacher A. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 92 (3): 241–247, 2004. PMID: 15145582.

Derivation of Numerical Values for the World Health Organization Guidelines for Recreational

Waters. Kay D, Bartram J, Pruess A, Ashbolt N, Wyer MD, Fleisher J, Fewtrell L Rogers A and Rees G. Water Research 38 (5): 1296–1304, 2004. PMID: 14975663.

A Review of Outbreaks of Foodborne Disease Associated with Passenger Ships: Evidence for Risk

Management (Review). Rooney R*, Cramer E, Mantha S, Nichols G, Bartram J, Farber J and Benembarek P. Public Health Reports vol 119(4) pp 427–434, 2004. PMID: 15219800.

A Review of Outbreaks of Waterborne Disease Associated with Ships: Evidence for Risk

Management (Review). Rooney R*, Bartram J, Cramer E, Mantha S, Nichols G, Suraj R, Todd E. Public Health Reports Vol 119(4) pp 435–442, 2004. Review. PMID: 15219801.

Distribution of major health risks: Findings from the global burden of disease study. PLOS Medicine Volume 1, Issue 1, 2004, Article number e27, Pages 044-055. Rodgers, A; Ezzati, M; Vander Hoorn, S; Lopez, A.D; Lin, R.-B; Murray, C.J.L; Fishman, S; Caulfield, L.E; de Onis, M; Blössner, M; Hyder, A.A; Mullany, L; Black, R.E; Stoltzfus, R.J; Rice, A.J; West, K.P., Jr; Lawes, C; Law, M; Elliott, P; MacMahon, S; James, W.P.T.; Jackson-Leach, R; Ni Mhurchu, C; Kalamara, E; Shayeghi, M; Rigby, N.J; Nishida, C; Lock, K; Pomerleau, J; Causer, L; McKee, M; Bull, F.C; Armstrong, T; Dixon, T; Ham, S; Neiman, A; Pratt, M; Rehm, J; Room, R; Monteiro, M; Gmel, G; Graham, K; Rehn, N; Sempos, C.T; Frick, U; Jernigan, D; Degenhardt, L; Hall, W; Warner-Smith, M; Lynskey, M; Slaymaker, E; Walker, N; Zaba, B; Collumbien, M; Gerressu, M; Cleland, J; Prüss-Ustun, A; Kay, D; Fewtrell, L; Bartram, J; Cohen, A; Anderson, R; Ostro, B; Dev Pandey, K; Krzyzanowski, M; Künzli, N; Gutschmidt, K; Pope, A; Romieu, I; Samet, J; Smith, K; Smith, K.R; Mehta, S; Feuz, M; Landrigan, P; Ayuso, J.L; McMichael, A; Campbell-Lendrum, D; Kovats, S; Edwards, S; Wilkinson, P; Tanser, F; Le Sueur, D; Schlesinger, M; Andronova, N; Nicholls, R; Wilson, T; Hales, S; Concha, M; Imel Nelson, D; Fingerhut, M; Leigh, J; Corvalan, C; Driscoll, T; Imel Nelson, D; Kyle Steenland, N; Leigh, J; Kyle Steenland, N; Punnett, L; Tak, S.W; Phillips, S;

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Hauri, A.M; Armstrong, G.L; Hutin, Y.J.F; Andrews, G; Corry, J; Slade, T; Swanston, H; Blakely, T; Kieft, C; Wilson, N; Woodward, A.

Water in Food Production and Processing: quantity and quality concerns. Kirby RM, Bartram J and Carr R. Food Control 14 (5): 283–299, 2003.

Providing Clean Water, Keeping Water Clean: An Integrated Approach. Thompson T, Sobsey M

and Bartram J. Int J Environ Health Research Vol 13 pp S89–S94 (June 2003).

Water Quality and Health in the New Millennium: the Role of the World Health Organization Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Forum Nutr 56: 396–405, 2003.

New Water Forum will repeat old message (editorial). Bartram J. Bull WHO 81 (3) p 158, 2003. PMID: 12764509.

Estimating the Burden of Disease from Water, Sanitation and Hygiene at a Global Level. Pruess A,

Kay D Fewtrell L, and Bartram J. Environmental Health Perspectives Vol 110 No 5 pp 537–542, May 2002. PMID: 12003760.

Waterborne Health Risks and the WHO Perspective. Younes M and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health 204 (4), 255 – 263, 2001. PMID: 11833299.

Not Just a Drop in the Bucket: Expanding Access to Point-of-use Water Treatment Systems. Mintz

E, Bartram J, Lochery P and Wegelin M. Am J Public Health 91 (10) pp 1565–1570, 2001. PMID: 11574307.

‘Safe’ Drinking Water Worldwide. Bartram J and Hueb J. Schriftenr Ver Wasser Boden Lufthyg. 2000; 108:24–44. PMID: 11225278.

Health Risks Caused by Freshwater Cyanobacteria in Recreational Waters (Review). Chorus I,

Falconer IR, Salas HJ and Bartram J. Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health Part B Crit Rev 3(4): 323–347, 2000. PMID: 11055209.

Regulation of Drinking-water Standards. Helmer R, Bartram J and Galal-Gorchev H. Water Supply 17 (3): 1–6, 1999.

The World Health Organization in Europe and its Role in Water and Health. Bartram J. The Environmentalist 19: 17–22, 1999.

Water Supply and Quality Issues in Central and Eastern Europe and the Newly Independent

States. Bartram J and Jacob J. Waterlines Vol 16 (1), 1997, pp. 10–13.

The Prevention and Control of Cholera. Bartram J and Howard G. Waterlines Vol 12 No 4, April 1994, pp. 2–3.

Water Use in the Andes. Bartram J and Lloyd B, Waterlines, Vol 10, No 3, January 1992, pp. 2–4.

Spring Capping in the Peruvian Highlands. Wedgwood K and Bartram J, Waterlines, 10 (3) January 1992, pp 20–23.

Surveillance Solutions to Microbiological Problems in Water Quality Control in Developing

Countries. Lloyd BJ and Bartram J. Water Sci Tech Vol 24 No 2 pp 61–75, 1991.

Drinking Water Microbiology in Developing Countries. B Lloyd and J Bartram. 1990. Proceedings of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control. International Symposium on Health-Related Water Microbiology. Tubingen, Germany.

Improving Piped Water Supplies in Peru. Lloyd B, Pardón M and Bartram J. Waterlines: 7 (3) (1989).

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Water Supply in Primary Health Care: Experiences of Amazon Jungle Indian Communities.

Bartram J and Johns W; Waterlines 7 (1), July 1988, pp. 28–31. Re-published in Kerr (Ed) Community Health and Sanitation pp303–308.

The Removal of Viruses by Filtration through Sand. Wheeler D, Bartram J and Lloyd BJ in Slow Sand Filtration: Recent Developments in Water Treatment Technology Graham NJD (Ed). Ellis Horwood, Chichester, United Kingdom, 1988 pp 207–229.

Water treatment and testing in Latin America. Lloyd B, Wheeler D, Pardon M and Bartram J; J Appl. Bact 63(6) pR6, 1987.

The development and implementation of a water surveillance and improvement programme for

Peru. Lloyd, B.; Pardon, M.; Bartram, J. In American Society for Civil Engineers International Conference on Resources Mobilisation for Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation in Developing Nations; American Society for Civil Engineers: San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1987; pp. 640–652.

Books and Published Reports Authored or Co-authored

Review of the North Carolina Drinking Water Provisional Health Goal for GenX. North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Secretaries’ Science Advisory Board. 2018. 23 pp. Roles: Board Chair and contributing author. https://files.nc.gov/ncdeq/GenX/SAB/SAB-GenX-Report-DRAFT-082018.pdf

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in Health Care Facilities: status in low- and middle-income countries

and way forward. Cronk R and Bartram J, 2015. World Health Organization, Geneva. (pp X + 38).

Public health and social benefits of at-house water supplies. Final Report. Evans, B.; Bartram, J.; Hunter, P.; Williams, A.R*.; Geere, J.A.; Majuru, B.; Bates, L.; Fisher, M*.; Overbo, A*.; Schmidt, W.P. University of Leeds, Leeds, UK (2013) (vi + 53 pages).

Technologies for Climate Change Adaptation – the Water Sector. Mark Elliott*, Andrew Armstrong,

Joseph Lobuglio and Jamie Bartram, 2011. (128 pages). United Nations Environment Programme, Risoe Centre. Roskilde, Denmark. http://tech-action.org/Guidebooks/TNA_Guidebook_AdaptationWater.pdf

Vision 2030: The Resilience of Water Supply and Sanitation in the face of Climate Change,

Summary and policy implications. Howard G and Bartram J. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2009 (41 pages).

Water Safety Plan Manual – step by step risk management for drinking-water suppliers. Bartram J, Corrales L, Davison A, Deere D, Drury D, Gordon B, Howard G, Rhinegold A and Stevens M. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2009 (102 pages) (was also published in translation, including into French Spanish, Polish and Russian).

Safer Water, Better Health: costs, benefits and sustainability of interventions to protect and improve

health. Pruess-Ustun A, Bos R, Gore F and Bartram J. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2008. (Described in a Lancet editorial the month of publication as a ‘landmark report’).

Considering Water Quality for use in the Food Industry. Fawell J, Bartram J, Carr R, Cornel P, Hopman R, Jones G, Kirby R, Klenk I, Olivier D, Oron G, Rennaud J-P, Rosenwinkel K-H, Saunders T, Tran L-A, and Wildemann T. pp 48. ILSI Europe, Brussels, Belgium, 2008.

Regional and Global Costs of Attaining the Water Supply and Sanitation Target (Target 10) of the

Millennium Development Goals. Guy Hutton and Jamie Bartram. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2008 [this is an extended version with data tables and expanded discussion of the Bull WHO publication of similar title and same authorship]

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Water, sanitation and hygiene: quantifying the health impact at national and local levels in countries with incomplete water supply and sanitation coverage, Environmental Burden of Disease Series

Number No 15. pp 71. Fewtrell L, Pruess-Ustun A, Bos R, Gore, F and Bartram J. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland, 2007.

Economic and health effects of increasing coverage of low-cost household drinking-water supply and sanitation interventions in countries off-track to meet MDG Target 10 (background report to the

UNDP Human Development Report 2006) pp 53. Hutton G, Haller L and Bartram J. World Health

Organization, Geneva, 2007. Also published as Hutton, G., Haller, L. and Bartram, J. Economic and health effects of increasing coverage of low-cost water and sanitation interventions: Human Development Report Office Occasional Paper 2006/33. Hutton G Haller L and Bartram J. UNDP, 2006.

Water Safety Plan Manual. Annette Davison, Dan Deere, Melita Stevens, Guy Howard and Jamie

Bartram. World Health Organization, Geneva. 2006.

Chemical Safety of Drinking-water: Assessing priorities for risk management. Thompson T, Fawell

J, Kunikane S, Jackson D, Appleyard S, Callan P, Bartram J and Kingston P. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2007.

Water Safety Plans: Managing Drinking-water Quality from Catchment to Consumer. Davison A,

Howard G, Stevens M, Callan P, Fewtrell L, Deere D and Bartram J. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2005 (document WHO/SDE/WSH/05.06).

The Effect of Irrigation and Large Dams on the Burden of Malaria on Global and Regional Scale. Report prepared for the WHO-commissioned study Burden of water-related vector-borne diseases: (Based on this report, an article was published in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (Am J Trop Med Hyg 72(4), 2005: 392–406)). Jennifer Keiser, Jürg Utzinger, Marcel

Tanner, Marcia Caldas de Castro, Burton H. Singer, Michael F. Maltese. Robert Bos, Jamie

Bartram and Laurence Haller. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2005.

The Sanitation Challenge: Turning Commitment into Reality. Evans BE and Bartram J. World Health Organization, 2005.

Health, Dignity and Development: What will it take? Report of the UN Millennium Project Task Force on Water and Sanitation. SIWI, Stockholm, Sweden, 2005.

Domestic Water Quantity, Service Level and Health. Howard G and Bartram J. WHO, Geneva, 2003.

Water Safety Plans. Davison A, Howard G, Stevens M, Callan P, Kirby R, Deere D, and Bartram J. World Health Organization, Geneva. WHO/SDE/WSH/02.09, 2002.

Towards an Assessment of the Socioeconomic Impact of Arsenic Poisoning in Bangladesh. Alistair

Curry, Guy Carrin, Sombo Yamamura, Jamie Bartram, Han Heijnen, Jacqueline Sims, Jose Hueb and Yuko Sato. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2000. Pp i–iv + 1–38. Document WHO/SDE/WSH/004.

Infrastructure and Training Needs for Sustainable Urban Sanitation in Africa. Howard G and

Bartram J. Published by the University of Surrey Guildford, England on behalf of the Commonwealth Secretariat, ISBN 1 85 23 711 45, 1993.

Surveillance and Improvement of Peruvian Drinking Water Supplies Lloyd B, Bartram J, Rojas R, Pardón M, Wheeler D and Wedgwood K, Robens Institute, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK, ISBN 185237 0629, 1991.

Drinking Water Supply Surveillance, Bartram J. ISBN 185237 0610, Robens Institute, University of Surrey, UK, 1990.

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Books Edited (includes several WHO ‘Guidelines’ for which I managed international consensus-building, contributed directly to text development and provided overall editorial steering).

The Water, Energy, Food and Climate Nexus: challenges and an agenda for action. Felix Dodds

and Jamie Bartram (Eds). 2016. Routledge, Abingdon and New York.

Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). 2015. Pp xviii + 732. Routledge, London.

Animal Waste, Water Quality and Human Health. Al Dufour, Jamie Bartram, Robert Bos and Victor Gannon (Eds). 2012. IWA-Publishing, London on behalf of the World Health Organization.

Guidelines for Safe Use of Wastewater and Excreta in Agriculture and Aquaculture. Details to be inserted.

Water Safety in Buildings. David Cunliffe, Jamie Bartram, Emmanuel Briand, Yves Chartier, Jeni Colbourne, David Drury, John Lee, Benedikt Schaefer and Susanne Surman-Lee (Eds). WHO, Geneva, 2011.

Safe Management of Shellfish and Harvest Waters. Rees G, Pond K, Kay D, Bartram J and Santo-Domingo J (Eds). World Health Organization, Geneva and IWA Publishing, London, 2010 (pp xii + 346).

Law for Water Management: A Guide to Concepts, and Effective Approaches. Jessica Vapnek,

Bruce Aylward, Christie Popp and Jamie Bartram (Eds). FAO, Rome, 2009.

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Standards for Schools in Low-cost Settings. John Adams, Jamie

Bartram, Yves Chartier and Jackie Sims (Eds). UNICEF, New York and World Health Organization, Geneva, 2009 (pp 49).

Calcium and Magnesium in Drinking-water: Public Health Significance. Cotruvo J and Bartram J (Eds). 2009. World Health Organization, Geneva, pp 180.

Essential environmental health standards in health-care. Adams J, Bartram J and Chartier Y (Eds). Pp 43. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2008.

Legionella and the Prevention of Legionellosis. Bartram J, Chartier Y, Lee JV, Pond K and Surman-Lee S (Eds). 2007. World Health Organization, Geneva. Pp 278. [According to a review by Joseph McDade, published by CDC, “this book … has much to recommend and little to criticize”.]

Guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments Volume 2: Swimming Pools and Similar Environments. World Health Organization. (Co-coordinator and contributor). WHO, Geneva, Switzerland pp xxi + 118. Includes contributions from 61 people from 20 countries, 2006.

Asia Water Watch 2015 (Co-coordinator and contributor). pp 55. Published by Asian Development Bank on behalf of ADB, UNDP, UN/ESCAP and WHO, 2005.

Waterborne Zoonoses: Identification, causes and control. pp 560. Cotruvo JA, Dufour A, Rees G,

Bartram J, Carr, R, Cliver, DO, Craun GF, Feyer R and Gannon VPJ (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality Third Edition. World Health Organization. (Co-coordinator and contributor). WHO, Geneva Switzerland. Includes contributions from 490 people from 90 countries, 2004.

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Pathogenic Mycobacteria in Water: A guide to public health consequences, monitoring and

management. pp 237. Pedley S, Bartram J, Rees G, Dufour A, and Cotruvo J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

Heterotrophic Plate Counts and Drinking-water Safety: the significance of HPCs for Water Quality

and Human Health. Bartram J, Cotruvo C, Exner M, Fricker C and Glasmacher A (Eds). pp 256. IWA Publishing, London, UK and WHO, Geneva, 2003.

Guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments Volume 1: Coastal and Freshwater. World Health Organization. WHO, Geneva, Switzerland. (Co-coordinator and contributor) ppxxxii + 219. Includes contributions from 130 people from 33 countries, 2003.

Assessing Microbial Safety of Drinking Water. Dufour A, Snozzi M, Koster W, Bartram J, Ronchi E and Fewtrell L (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, UK on behalf of WHO and OECD, 2003.

Water and Health in Europe: a joint report from the European Environment Agency and the WHO

Regional Office for Europe. Bartram J, Thyssen N, Gowers A, Pond K, and Lack T (Eds) pp 222. WHO Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2002.

Water Quality Guidelines, Standards and Health: Assessment of risk and risk management for

water-related infectious disease. Fewtrell L and Bartram J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, England and WHO, Geneva, Switzerland. Pp 424, 2001.

Security of Public Water Supplies. Deininger R, Literathy P, and Bartram J (Eds). Proceedings of a NATO International Conference on Water and Security, Hungary, 1998. Kluwer Publishing, New York, 2000.

Monitoring Bathing Waters: a practical guide to the design and implementation of assessments and monitoring programmes. A 337-page textbook with chapter contributions by a series of recognised

authorities on the theme. Bartram J and Rees G (Eds). E&FN Spon, London, England on behalf of WHO, USEPA and EC, 2000.

Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water: a guide to their public health consequences, monitoring and management. A 416-page textbook with chapter contributions by a series of recognised authorities

on the theme. Chorus I and Bartram J (Eds). E&FN Spon, London, England, 1999.

Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality 2nd Edition, Volume 3: Surveillance and Control of Community Supplies. World Health Organization. WHO, Geneva, Switzerland pp 238, 1997 (coordinator and principal contributor).

Water Quality Monitoring: A Practical Guide to the Design and Implementation of Freshwater

Quality Studies and Monitoring Programmes. Bartram J and Ballance R (Eds). Chapman and Hall, London, England, pp 383, 1996.

Environmental Sanitation for the Control of Cholera and other Epidemic Diarrhoeal Diseases Control [a series of 70 Facts Sheets]. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland, 1996 (draft published 1993). [Coordinator and co-author].

Guidelines on Sanitation for Small Communities. Wedgwood K, Bartram J and Rickards A (Eds) World Health Organization/ Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, Alexandria, Egypt, 1993. (195 pages).

Guidelines on Technology for Water Supply Systems in Small Communities Wedgwood K, Bartram

J and Rickards A (Eds) World Health Organziation/Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, Alexandria, Egypt, 1992 (160 pages).

Surveillance and Improvement of Peruvian Drinking-water Supplies. Lloyd BJ, Bartram J, Rojas Vargas RA and Pardon Ojeda M. Robens Institute, 1991.

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Book Chapters Authored or Co-authored

Benchmarking Progress on Reducing Inequalities over Time. Luh J and Bartram J in Achieving Equality in Water and Sanitation Service Delivery, Cumming O and Slaymaker T (Eds). Routledge, London, 2018 Details pending.

Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to Water and Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human Rights Accountability. Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan

Cronk*, Jeanne Luh*, Catarina de Albuquerque and Jamie Bartram pp100–119 in Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy, Conca K and Weinthal E, 2018 pp xiv+692. Oxford University Press, New York.

Revisiting Dignity: The Human Right to Sanitation. Malcolm Langford, Jamie Bartram and Virginia

Roaf in M. Langford and A. Russell (eds.), The Human Right to Water: Theory, Practice and Prospects 2017, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Challenges to Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals: Water Treatment. Jeanne Luh* and

Jamie Bartram pp597—622 in Chemistry and Water: The Science behind Sustaining the World's Most Crucial Resource; Ahuja S (Ed) pp xvii + 649, 2017. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

Introduction (Chapter 1). Bartram J and Baum R pp 1–12 in Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. 2015. Routledge, London.

Bradley Classification of Disease Transmission Routes for Water-related Hazards (Chapter 3).

Bartram J and Hunter P pp 20–37 in Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. 2015. Routledge, London.

Drinking-water Supply (Chapter 18). Bartram J and Godfrey S pp 191–202 in Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. 2015. Routledge, London.

International Policy (Chapter 43). Bartram J, Kayser G, Gordon B and Dodds F. pp433–446 in

Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. 2015. Routledge, London.

Improved but not necessarily safe: Water access and the Millennium Development Goals. Robert

Bain, Jim Wright, Hong Yang, Stephen Gundry, Steve Pedley, and Jamie Bartram. Pp89–95 in Australian National University UNESCO Water Chair book (2014) in celebration of the 2013 UN International Year of Water Cooperation.

Natural Resources, Sustainability and Health. J Bartram in Public Health Linkages in a Sustainable World: workshop summary. Coussens C and Rusch E (Eds). 2013. Institute of Medicine, Washington DC.

Beyond Demand: Water’s Social and Environmental Benefits (Chapter 4). Rajagopalan Balaji,

Jamie Bartram, David Coates, Richard Connor, John Harding, Molly Hellmuth, Liza Leclerc,

Vasudha Pangare and Jennifer Gentry Shields in UN-Water World Water Development Report 4: Managing Water under Uncertainty and Risk. UNESCO, Paris 2012.

Essential Nature of Water for Health: Water as Part of the Dietary Intake for Nutrients and the Role

of Water in Hygiene. A.C. Grandjean, J.K. Bartram (2011). In: Nriagu JO (ed.) Encyclopedia of Environmental Health, volume 2, pp. 594–604 Burlington: Elsevier

Worldwide Regulatory Strategies and Policies for Drinking Water. J. Mercer, J. Bartram (2011). In: Nriagu JO (ed.) Encyclopedia of Environmental Health, volume 5, pp. 777–787 Burlington: Elsevier B V.

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Expert Consensus. G Rees, J Bartram and D Kay. Chapter 1 in Safe Management of Shellfish

and Harvest Waters. Rees G, Pond K, Kay D, Bartram J and Santo-Domingo J (Eds). World Health Organization, Geneva and IWA Publishing, London, 2010 (pp xii + 346).

Monitoring drinking water supplies. Bartram JK and Howard G. In: Water Health, Ed WOK Grabow. Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems, Developed under the auspices of the UNESCO. Eolss Publishers, Oxford, UK, 2010. [approx 29 pages, e-publication with no page numbers) [http://www.eolss.net].

Introduction. Bruce Aylward, Jamie Bartram, Sasha Koo-Oshima and Jessica Vapnek. Chapter 1

pp 1–22 in Law for Water Management: A Guide to Concepts, and Effective Approaches. Jessica Vapnek, Bruce Aylward, Christie Popp and Jamie Bartram (Eds). FAO, Rome, 2009.

Drinking Water. Guy Howard, Jamie Bartram, David Cunliffe and Christie Popp, Chapter 7 pp 209–244 in Law for Water Management: A Guide to Concepts, and Effective Approaches. Jessica Vapnek, Bruce Aylward, Christie Popp and Jamie Bartram (Eds). FAO, Rome, 2009.

Water and Agriculture. Jamie Bartram, Sasha Koo-Oshima, Christie Popp, Jessica Vapnek and

Jared Gardner. Chapter 8 pp 245–283 in Law for Water Management: A Guide to Concepts, and Effective Approaches. Jessica Vapnek, Bruce Aylward, Christie Popp and Jamie Bartram (Eds). FAO, Rome, 2009

Global Supply of Virus Safe Drinking-water. de Roda Husman AM and Bartram J pp30 in Human Viruses in Water. Albert Bosch (Ed). Elsevier, 2008.

Approaches to Risk Management. Bartram J, Bentham R, Briand E, Callan P, Crespi S, Lee JV

and Surman-Lee pp 61–78 in Legionella and the Prevention of Legionellosis. Bartram J, Chartier Y, Lee JV, Pond K and Surman-Lee S (Eds). World Health Organization, Geneva, 2007.

Groundwater and Public Health. Howard G, Bartram J, Pedley S, Schmoll O, Chorus I, Berger P

and Chilton J. pp 3–19 in Schmoll O, Howard G, Chilton J and Chorus I (Eds) Protecting Groundwater for Health: Managing the quality of drinking-water sources. World Health Organization, Geneva and IWA Publishing, London, 2006.

Unsafe Water, Sanitation and Hygiene. Pruss-Ustun A, Kay D; Fewtrell L and Bartram J in Comparative Quantification of Health Risks, Ezzati M Lopez AD Rodgers A and Murray CJL. Volume 2. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2004.

The Control Envelope and Risk Management, Carr R and Bartram J pp 66–90 in Waterborne

Zoonoses: Identification, causes and control. Cotruvo JA, Dufour A, Rees G, Bartram J, Carr, R, Cliver, DO, Craun GF, Feyer R and Gannon VPJ (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

The Stockholm Framework for Guidelines for Microbial Contaminants in Water. Carr R and

Bartram J, pp 452–459 in Waterborne Zoonoses: Identification, causes and control. Cotruvo JA, Dufour A, Rees G, Bartram J, Carr, R, Cliver, DO, Craun GF, Feyer R and Gannon VPJ (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

Introduction Nichols G, Ford T, Bartram J, Dufour A and Portaels F pp 1–14 in Pathogenic Mycobacteria in Water: A guide to public health consequences, monitoring and management. S Pedley, J Bartram, G Rees, A Dufour and J Cotruvo (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

Natural Ecology and survival in water of mycobacteria of potential public health significance.

Falkinham JO, Nichols G, Bartram J, Dufour A and Portaels F pp 15–25 in Pathogenic Mycobacteria in Water: A guide to public health consequences, monitoring and management. S Pedley J Bartram, G Rees, A Dufour and J Cotruvo (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

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Approaches to risk management in priority setting. Ford T, Herman-Taylor J, Nichols G, Cangelosi

G and Bartram J pp 169–178 in Pathogenic Mycobacteria in Water: A guide to public health consequences, monitoring and management. S Pedley J Bartram, G Rees, A Dufour and J Cotruvo (Eds). IWA Publishing, London and WHO, Geneva, 2004.

Investigation of Sporadic Waterborne Disease. Bartram J pp127–131 in Drinking Water and Infectious Disease Establishing the Links, (pp221) Hunter PR, Waite M and Ronchi E (Eds). CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL USA; and IWA Publishing London, England, 2002.

Drinking-water Standards for the Developing World. Bartram J and Howard G, pp 221–240 in The Handbook of Water and Wastewater Microbiology, Duncan Mara and Nigel Horan (Eds). Academic Press, London, UK, 2003.

Assessment of Risk, Hunter PR, Payment P, Ashbolt N and Bartram J pp 79–109 in Dufour A, Snozzi M, Koster W Bartram J, Ronchi E and Fewtrell L (Eds) Assessing Microbial Safety of Drinking Water. IWA Publishing, London, UK on behalf of WHO and OECD, 2003.

Monitoring the Quality of Drinking-water During Storage and Distribution. Robertson W, Stanfield

G, Howard G and Bartram J in Dufour A, Snozzi M, Koster W Bartram J, Ronchi E and Fewtrell L (Eds) Assessing Microbial Safety of Drinking Water. IWA Publishing, London, UK on behalf of WHO and OECD, 2003.

Health Effects Associated with Wastewater and Excreta, Bartram J and Carr R pp 567–580 in Environmentally Sound Technologies for Wastewater and Stormwater Management (pp 585), UNEP-IETC and Murdoch University Environmental Technology Centre. IWA Publishing, London, England, 2002.

Harmonised Assessment of Risk and Risk Management for Water-related Infectious Disease: an

overview. Bartram J, Fewtrell L and Stenstrom TA pp 1–16 in Water Quality: Guidelines, Standards and Health. Fewtrell L and Bartram J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, England and WHO, Geneva, Switzerland, 2001.

Guidelines: The Current Position. Havelaar A, Blumenthal UJ, Strauss M, Kay D and Bartram J pp

17–42 in Water Quality: Guidelines, Standards and Health. Fewtrell L and Bartram J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, England and WHO, Geneva, Switzerland, 2001.

A Public Health Perspective for Establishing Water-related Guidelines and Standards. Eisenberg

JNS, Bartram J and Hunter PR pp 229–256 in Water Quality: Guidelines, Standards and Health. Fewtrell L and Bartram J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, England and WHO, Geneva, Switzerland, 2001.

Risk Communication. Lang S, Fewtrell L and Bartram J pp 317–332 in Water Quality: Guidelines, Standards and Health. Fewtrell L and Bartram J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, England and WHO, Geneva, Switzerland, 2001.

Regulation of Microbiological Quality in the Water Cycle. Howard G, Bartram J, Schaub S and

Deere D pp 377–394 in Water Quality: Guidelines, Standards and Health. Fewtrell L and Bartram J (Eds). IWA Publishing, London, England and WHO, Geneva, Switzerland, 2001.

Summary of Panel Discussions: Implications for Water Quality Criteria and Guidelines. Sobsey

MD, Havelaar AH, Bartram J, Briscoe J, Cotruvo JA, Grabow W, Howard G and Pardon M; pp

189–193 in Microbial Pathogens and Disinfection By-products In Drinking-water: Health Effects and Management of Risks, GF Craun, FS Hauchman and DE Robinson (Eds). ILSI Press, Washington DC, USA, 2001.

Viral and Bacterial Pollution of Beaches. Bartram J, Salas H, and Dufour A. in Steele JH, Thorpe SA and Turekian KK (Eds) Encyclopedia of Ocean Sciences, Vol. 6 (T–Z; Index). pp. 3157–3166. 2001. Academic Press, London, England.

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Facing the Global Challenges of Water Safety. Bartram J, Hueb J, Murchie P and Younes M. pp

515–532 in Microbial Pathogens and Disinfection By-products in Drinking-water: Health Effects and Management of Risks (Craun G, Hauchman F and Robinson D (Eds). ILSI Press, Washington DC, USA, 2001.

Is Global Clean Water Attainable? Bartram J and Hueb J pp37–60 in Andrew PW, Oyston P, Smith GL, and Stewart-Tull DE (Eds) Fighting Infection in the 21st Century. Blackwell Science, Oxford, England, 2000.

Introduction. Rees G, Bartram J, Pond K and Goyet S in Monitoring Bathing Waters Bartram J and Rees G (Eds) pp 1–13. E&FN Spon, London, England, 2000.

Resourcing and Implementation. Rees G, Bartram J, Pike EB and Robertson W in Monitoring Bathing Waters Bartram J and Rees G (Eds) pp 27–47. E&FN Spon, London, England, 2000.

Physical Hazards, Drowning and Injuries. Mittlestaedt A, Bartram J, Wooler A Pond K and Mood E

in Monitoring Bathing Waters Bartram J and Rees G (Eds) pp 102–111. E&FN Spon, London, England, 2000.

Drinking Water Safety. Fenger BH and Bartram J, in International Food Safety Handbook: Science Regulation and Control. Kees van der Heijden, Maged Younes, Lawrence Fishbein and Sanford Miller (Eds). Marcel Dekker New York, USA, 1999. pp 107–122.

Introduction. Bartram J, Carmichael WC, Chorus I, Jones J and Skulberg OM in Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water Ingrid Chorus and Jamie Bartram (Eds) pp 1–14. E&FN Spon, London, England, 1999.

Safe Levels and Safe Practices. Falconer I, Bartram J, Chorus I, Kuiper-Goodman T, Utkilen H,

Burch M and Codd GA in Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water Ingrid Chorus and Jamie Bartram (Eds) pp 155–178. E&FN Spon, London, England, 1999.

Situation Assessment, Planning and Management. Bartram J, Burch M, Falconer IR, Jones G and

Kuiper-Goodman T in Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water Ingrid Chorus and Jamie Bartram (Eds) pp 179–209. E&FN Spon, London, England, 1999.

Implementation of Management Plans. Bartram J, Vapnek JC, Jones G, Bowling, L, Falconer I

and Codd GA in Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water Ingrid Chorus and Jamie Bartram (Eds) pp 211–234. E&FN Spon, London, England, 1999.

Fieldwork: Site Inspection and Sampling. Utkilen H, Fastner J and Bartram J in Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water Ingrid Chorus and Jamie Bartram (Eds) pp 329–345. E&FN Spon, London, England, 1999.

Research Needs on Water Environment and Health in Europe. Calamari D and Bartram J. pp 3/1–

3/19 in Water and Health Research Priorities in Europe. World Health Organization, Rome Italy, 1997.

Water and Health in Europe. Pinter A and Bartram J, pp 10/1–10/19 in Water and Health Research Priorities in Europe. World Health Organization, Rome Italy, 1997.

Introduction. Bartram J and Helmer R in Water Quality Monitoring: A Practical Guide to the

Design and Implementation of Freshwater Quality Studies and Monitoring Programmes. Bartram J and Ballance R (Eds). Chapman and Hall, London, England, 1996. pp 1–8.

Resources for a Monitoring Programme Bartram J in Water Quality Monitoring: A Practical Guide to the Design and Implementation of Freshwater Quality Studies and Monitoring Programmes. Bartram J and Ballance R (Eds). Chapman and Hall, London, England, 1996. pp 62–70.

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Fieldwork and Sampling. Bartram J, Makela A and Malkki E in Water Quality Monitoring: A Practical Guide to the Design and Implementation of Freshwater Quality Studies and Monitoring Programmes. Bartram J and Ballance R (Eds). Chapman and Hall, London, England, 1996. pp 71–93.

Microbiological Analyses. Bartram J and Pedley S in Water Quality Monitoring: A Practical Guide to the Design and Implementation of Freshwater Quality Studies and Monitoring Programmes. Bartram J and Ballance R (Eds). Chapman and Hall, London, England, 1996. pp 237–262.

Groundwater Quality and Water Supply in Lima, Peru. Rojas R, Howard G and Bartram J in Groundwater Quality (AGID Special Publications No 17 (894) pp159–167) Nash H and McCall J (Eds), Chapman and Hall, London, England, 1994.

Surveillance Planning, Wheeler D and Bartram J in Dahi E (Ed) Surveillance and Control of Drinking-water Quality. Centre for Developing Countries, Technical University of Denmark, 1990.

Sanitary Inspection, Bartram J in Dahi E (Ed) Surveillance and Control of Drinking Water Quality. Centre for Developing Countries, Technical University of Denmark, 1990.

Drinking Water Analysis, Wheeler D and Bartram J in Dahi E (Ed) Surveillance and Control of Drinking Water Quality. Centre for Developing Countries, Technical University of Denmark, 1990.

Slow Sand Filtration Bartram J in Dahi E (Ed) Surveillance and Control of Drinking Water Quality. Centre for Developing Countries, Technical University of Denmark, 1990.

Published Conference Proceedings

Some lessons learned from engaging in WaSH participatory action research in Melanesian informal settlements. Barrington DJ, Shields KF, Saunders SG, Meo S, Sridharan S, Souter RT and

Bartram JK. Oral conference presentation published in Proceedings of the 40th WEDC International Conference: Local Action with International Cooperation to Improve and Sustain Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Services, Loughborough, UK, 2017. Available from https://wedc-knowledge.lboro.ac.uk/resources/conference/40/Barrington-2643.pdf

Assessing the Costs and Benefits of Water Safety Plans. Loret JF, Blaudin de The C; Martin

Alonso J, Puigdomenec Serra C, Kayser G* and Bartram J. Poster presented at IWA Global Congress, Brisbane, October 2016. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Could Your Utility Be Using a Better Risk Management Strategy to Improve Water Quality? Why Water Utilities Would Use Water Safety Plans in North Carolina. Urooj Amjad*, Rachel Baum*,

Jeanne Luh*, and Jamie Bartram. Oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Assessing the impact of climate change related hazards on the vulnerability of North Carolina drinking water systems Jeanne Luh*, Elizabeth C. Christenson*, David A. Holcomb, Laura R.

Hamrick, and Jamie Bartram. Oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Adverse health effects of recreational bathing: A meta-analysis of randomised exposure trials in four European countries. HC Au-Yeung, D Kay, DRh Thomas, M Figueras, V.Vargha, M Kádár, PR

Hunter, J Bartram, RL Salmon. Presented at Five Nations Conference, Glasgow, 18–19 May 2010.

Water and Sanitation Goals for the Rich and for the Poor, Bartram J pp 121–127 in van Dijk JC (Ed) “Water and Sanitation for All”, Technical University, Delft, Netherlands, 2008.

Framework for Drinking-water Safety in Saint Lucia: A Water Safety Plan Approach. McKie A,

Colbourne J, Bartram J, Clarke B and Theobalds A. Paper presented at 32nd WEDC International

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Conference, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 13–17 November 2006; pp 593–597 in Sustainable Development of Water Resources, Water Supply and Environmental Sanitation (Proceedings of the 32nd WEDC International Conference, J Fisher (Ed), 2007 (peer reviewed).

Framework for Drinking-water Safety in Saint Lucia: Health-based Targets. McKie A, Bartram J, Colbourne J, Clarke B and Theobalds A. Paper presented at 32nd WEDC International

Conference, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 2006; pp 600–607 597 in Sustainable Development of Water Resources, Water Supply and Environmental Sanitation (Proceedings of the 32nd WEDC International Conference, J Fisher (Ed), 2007 (peer reviewed).

Water and Human Health in Developing Countries and Disadvantaged Communities. Bartram J. Presentation at Safe Drinking-water: Where Science Meets Policy, Symposium 16–17 March 2006, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Crawford-Brown DJ, Hughes JA, Singer PC Reevy AW and Russo SA (Eds). Carolina Environmental Programme, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

World Health Organization Draft Guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments Volume 1:

Coastal and Freshwater; Faecal Pollution and Water Quality. Salas H and Bartram J. In Procs 2nd International Conference on Marine Waste Water Discharge, Istanbul 16–20 September 2002. Conference Presentations pp 1–20 (published on CD-ROM and internet).

Water Quality and Health in the New Millennium: The Role of the World Health Organization

Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Sobsey MD and Bartram J. In Proceedings of the 17th International Congress of Nutrition. S Karger Medical and Scientific Publishers, New York, USA, 2002 (peer reviewed).

Why HACCP and Risk Management is Needed. Bartram J. In Procs of Water Quality Technology Conference 10 November 2002, Seattle. American Water Works Association.

Waterborne Diseases–even in countries like Germany? Bartram J. in Umwelthygiene – Standortbestimmung und Wege in die Zukunft. Lange-Asschenfeldt H, Chorus I and Mucke H-G (Eds) pp 97–99. Eigenverlag Verein WaBoLu, Berlin, Germany, 2000.

Member of WHO delegation to Ministerial Conference on Water Security in the 21st Century, The Hague, part of the Second World Water Forum 17–22 March 2000.

Emerging Issues on Waterborne Pathogens. Bartram, J. Paper presented at AWWA International Conference on Emerging Pathogens and Water Safety, August 29–September 1, 1999, Milwaukee, USA.

Drinking-water Standards: A Means for Health Protection. Helmer R, Bartram J and Galal-Gorchev H. Proceedings of 11th IWSA Regional Conference and Exhibition ‘Integrating the Urban Water Cycle’. Australia, 1998.

Riesgos para la Salud causadas por cianobacterias y algas de agua dulce en aguas

recreacionales. I Chorus, IR Falconer, HJ Salas and J Bartram. Congreso Interamericano de Ingenieria Sanitaria y Ambiental, 26 (AIDIS-98), pp1–30.

Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water. Ingrid Chorus, Ian Falconer, Henry Salas and Bartram J. Paper presented at the AIDIS International Conference, Lima, Peru November 1998.

Future Perspectives and International Cooperation. Bartram J in Security of Public Water Supplies. Deininger R, Literathy P and Bartram J (Eds.) Proceedings of a NATO International Conference on Water and Security, Hungary, 1998. Kluwer Publishing, New York.

Small Water Supplies in Urban Areas of Developing Countries. Howard G, Bartram J and Luyima

P pp 83–94 in Providing Safe Drinking Water in Small Systems, Proceedings of the NSF Conference on Small Water Systems, May 1998, Washington DC USA. Cotruvo JA, Craun GF and Hearne N (Eds.) Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton USA, 2000 (peer reviewed)..

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The Need for Safe Drinking-water in Small Communities. Bartram J (Opening remarks) in Providing Safe Drinking Water in Small Systems, Proceedings of the NSF Conference on Small Water Systems, May 1998, Washington DC USA. Cotruvo JA, Craun GF and Hearne N (Eds.) Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton USA, 2000.

Effective Monitoring of Small Drinking-water Supplies. Bartram J. pp 353–366 in Providing Safe Drinking Water in Small Systems, Proceedings of the NSF Conference on Small Water Systems, May 1998, Washington DC USA. Cotruvo JA, Craun GF and Hearne N (Eds.) Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton USA, 2000 (peer reviewed).

The Association of Tourist Health with Aesthetic Quality and Environmental Values. Philipp R,

Pond K, Rees G and Bartram J in Mobility and Health: from Hominid Migration to Mass Tourism. Proceedings of the European Conference on Travel Medicine, 25–27 March 1998 pp195–199. Fondazione Cini, Venice, Italy.

Water for Health. Bartram J and Pond K pp 53–76 in Overview of the Environment and Health in Europe in the 1990s (EUR/ICP/EHCO 020205). Background document for the Third Inter-Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health, London, 16–18 June 1999. World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Protecting Public Health: Guidelines and Management of Health Risks from Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water. Jamie Bartram. Presentation at “Lake ’99”, Copenhagen, May 1999.

Policy and Administrative Issues. Bartram J in Molecular Technologies for Safe Drinking-water pp

1–16 in Proceedings of the OECD Workshop, Interlaken, 5–8 July 1998. OECD, Paris, 1998.

Standards for Recreational-waters: a risk-based approach. Kay D, Wyer MD, Fleisher JM,

Bartram J, and Jackson G. Paper presented at 19th biennial IAWQ International Conference, Vancouver, Canada; 21–26 June 1998.

Health benefits of Drinking-water Disinfection Bartram J in Chlorine Dioxide and Disinfection: Proceedings of the First European Symposium on Chlorine Dioxide and Disinfection, November 7–8, 1996, Rome, Italy. Anon, 1997. CIPA srl, Milan, Italy.

Environmental Education across Higher Education Curricula: Taking Responsibility: Health and

Well-being. Barwise J, Bartram J, Getliffe K, Ison E, Kenny P and Mason L. Report of a Seminar held at the University of Surrey 23 September 1993, Council for Environmental Education/World-wide Fund for Nature/Department of the Environment. Pluto Press, 1994.

Microbiological Aspects of Drinking Water Quality Monitoring. Bartram J and Wheeler D. Paper presented at East Mediterranean Regional Seminar on Drinking-water Quality, Cyprus, May 1991 and published in WHO-EM/ES/418-E.

Principles of Drinking Water Monitoring. Bartram J and Wheeler D. Paper presented at East Mediterranean Regional Seminar on Drinking-water Quality, Cyprus, May 1991 and published in WHO EM/ES/418-E.

Design of a Drinking Water Quality Monitoring Network. Bartram J and Wheeler D. Paper presented at East Mediterranean Regional Seminar on Drinking Water Quality, Cyprus, May 1991 and published in WHO-EM/ES/418-E.

Introduction to the Surveillance Programme of the Health Region of Armero, Tolima, Colombia

(Spanish): Bartram J in ‘Proceedings of National Seminar: Experiences and Perspectives for Surveillance and Improvement of Water Supply Systems’, Ministry of Health, Bogotá, Colombia.

International Experience in the Development of Surveillance of Drinking Water Supply Services

(Spanish): Bartram J and Lloyd B in 'Proceedings of National Seminar: Experiences and Perspectives for Surveillance and Improvement of Water Supply Systems’, Ministry of Health, Bogotá, Colombia, 1991.

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Agua Salud y Desarrollo. Bartram J in Proceedings of the Andean Regional Conference 'Surveillance and Improvement of Drinking Water Supply Services', CEPIS, Lima, Peru, 1991.

Environmental Monitoring and Institutional Roles in Post-Disaster Development. Bartram J,

Suarez M, Quiroga E and Galvis G in Maguire DP (Ed) Appropriate Development for Basic Needs, (Proceedings of Conference: 'Appropriate Development for Survival: The Contribution of Technology; Institution of Civil Engineers, London, UK). Thomas Telford, London, 1991 (peer reviewed).

The Development and Implementation of a Water Surveillance and Improvement Programme for

Peru Lloyd B, Pardon M and Bartram J; pp 640–652 in FW Montanari, Terrence Thompson, Terence P Curran and Walter Saukin (Eds): Resource Mobilization for Drinking Water and Sanitation in Developing Nations. Proceedings of the International Conference San Juan, Puerto Rico May pp768. American Society of Civil Engineers, 1987.

Book Contributions

Anon. Guidelines on Sanitation and Health. 2018. World Health Organization, Geneva. [member of Guidelines Development Group]

Anon. Water, Sanitation and Hygiene: Evidence Paper. May 2013. DfID, London. [Reviewer].

Anon. Water Recovery and Reuse: Guideline for Safe Application of Water Conservation Methods in Beverage Bottling and Food Processing. International Life Sciences Institute, 2012. [Expert reviewer].

WHO. Water Safety Planning for Small Community Water Supplies: Step-by-step Management Guidance for Drinking-water Supplies in Small Communities. pp i–vi+55. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2012. [Co-coordinator].

Anon. Engineering Solutions for Sustainability: Materials and Resources. Report and recommendations of a workshop organized by American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers; co-sponsored by American Society for Civil Engineers and American Institute of Chemical Engineers; and hosted by Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, July 22–24, 2009. TMS and Wiley, 2012. [Workshop participant and contributor].

WHO. Guide to Ship Sanitation. World Health Organization. Geneva 2011. [Contributor].

WHO. Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality, fourth edition. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland, 2011. [Contributor].

Tropical Health Technology. District Laboratory Practice in Tropical Countries (Part 2). Co-author with Andy Rickards of subunit 7.17: Water-related diseases and testing of water supplies, pp 143-156. Published by THT and Cambridge University Press, London.

WHO. Guide to Hygiene and Sanitation in Aviation, third edition, 2009. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. [Contributor].

Anon. Sanitation: A Human Rights Imperative. COHRE, UN-HABITAT, WaterAid and SDC, 2008 [contributor/reviewer].

WHO and UNICEF. Progress on Drinking-water and Sanitation: special focus on sanitation. WHO and UNICEF 2008 [contributor].

Anon. Manual on the Right to Water and Sanitation: a tool to assist policy makers and practitioners to develop strategies for implementing the human right to water and sanitation. AAAS, COHRE, SDC and UN-HABITAT, 2008. [Contributor].

WHO. International Travel and Health (successive editions 2001 to 2009). WHO, Geneva,

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annually from 2001 to 2009 [contributor of drinking water section and annual review/update of same].

Anon. Clean Water. What is Acceptable Microbial Risk? Lechevallier M and Buckley M. American Society for Microbiology, Washington DC, USA, 2008. [Contributor].

Anon. East Asia Sanitation. World Bank-WSP, UNICEF and WHO, 2007. [Contributor].

Anon. Potential Transmission of Avian Influenza (H5N1) through Water and Sewage and Ways to Reduce the Risks to Human Health. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2006 (and updated 2007). [Contributor].

Anon. Universal Sanitation in East Asia: Urgent Challenge or Mission Impossible. pp16. World Bank Water and Sanitation Programme, United Nations Children’s Fund and World Health Organization, 2007. [Contributor].

Anon. Review of Latest Available Evidence on Risks to Human Health through Potential Transmission of Avian Influenza (H5N1) Through Water and Sewage. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2007 pp 37. [Contributor].

Anon. Assessing the Suitability of Water for Intended Use in the Food Industry. ILSI-Europe, Brussels, 2007. [Contributor].

International Travel and Health, 2007. World Health Organization, Geneva [contributor].

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Fourth assessment report, 2007. [Contributor to

report and synthesis report].

WHO and UNICEF. Meeting the MDG Drinking-water and Sanitation Target: the Urban and Rural

Challenge of the Decade. WHO, Geneva and UNICEF, New York, 2006. [Contributor].

Preventing Disease through Healthy Environments. A Pruss-Ustun and C Corvalan. World Health Organization, 2006. [Contributor].

Fawell J, Bailey K, Chilton J, Dahi E, Fewtrell L and Magara Y. Fluoride in Drinking-water. WHO, Geneva and IWA Publishing, London, 2006. pp134. [Coordinator and contributor].

Anon. Household water storage, handling and point of use treatment. International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene, Geneva, Switzerland, 2006. [Contributor].

WHO. International Travel and Health, 2006. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2006. [Contributor].

Anon. Linking Poverty Reduction and Water Management. Poverty-Environment Partnership, 2006. [Contributor].

WHO and UNICEF. Water for Life: Making it Happen. WHO, Geneva and UNICEF, New York, 2005. [Contributor].

International Travel and Health, 2005. World Health Organization, Geneva [contributor]

Anon. Making Water a Part of Economic Development. SIWI, Stockholm, Sweden (report commissioned by Governments of Norway and Sweden as input to Commission on Sustainable Development CSD13), 2005. [Contributor].

WHO and UNICEF. Meeting the MDG Drinking-water and Sanitation Target: A Mid-term Assessment of Progress. UNICEF, New York and WHO, Geneva, 2004. [Contributor].

WHO. International Travel and Health, 2004. World Health Organization, Geneva [contributor]

Anon. The Right to Water. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2003. [Contributor].

Anon. Public Health Response to Biological and Chemical Weapons, WHO Guidance, Second Edition. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2003. [Contributor].

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Anon. Emerging Issues in Water and Infectious Disease. pp22. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2003. [Coordinator and contributor].

WHO. International Travel and Health, 2003. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2003. [Contributor].

Global Burden of Infectious Diseases through the Intestinal Tract: A Critical Scientific Assessment of the Literature, 2002. [Contributor].

WHO. International Travel and Health, 2002. World Health Organization, Geneva [contributor].

WHO and UNICEF. Global Water Supply and Sanitation Assessment 2000. WHO, Geneva and UNICEF, New York, 2000. [Contributor].

WHO. Depleted Uranium: Sources, exposure and health effects. WHO/SDE/PHE/01.1. World Health Organization, Geneva 2001. [Co-coordinator and contributor].

WHO. Human health and dams: the World Health Organization's submission to the World Commission on Dams (WCD). World Health Organization, Geneva. 2000. [Contributor].

Anon. World Resources A Guide to the Global Environment: Environmental Change and Human Health. Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 1998. [Contributor to Part 1: Environmental Change and Human Health].

Anon. Water Stress in Europe – can the challenge be met? European Environment Agency and United Nations Environment Programme, 1997 pp15. [Contributor].

Anon. Awards for Improving the Coastal Environment; the Example of the Blue Flag. UNEP, WTO and FEEE ISBN 92-807–1625-5, 1996. [Contributor].

WHO. Guidelines for Cholera Control. World Health Organization, Geneva, 1993. [Contributor].

WHO. 'Guidelines for Cholera Control', World Health Organization, Geneva, 1991. [Invited reviewer].

Other Publications: short articles, published book reviews and published interviews

Criteria and Framework Selection for Managing Risks to Surface Water Supplies. Karen Setty, Jennifer Heymann, Robert Raucher, Robert McConnell, Jamie Bartram. Submitted to Opflow 7 Sept 2018.

Experts Letter to New Zealand Minister of Health Hon David Clark, 2 Nov 2017. French H, Graham

J, Mackie J, Manning B, McBride G, Pfahlert J, Bartram J, Bos R, Hrudey S and Kay D. Co-author of letter calling for follow up to Havelock North campylobacteriosis outbreak.

Toilet marketing campaigns in developing countries erode people’s dignity – this is not acceptable. (2017) Dani J Barrington and Jamie Bartram. The Conversation on-line publication at https://theconversation.com/amp/toilet-marketing-campaigns-in-developing-countries-erode-peoples-dignity-this-is-not-acceptable-87909 Barrington, D.J., Bartram, J., Meo, S., Saunders, S.G., Shields, K.F., Sridharan, S., Souter, R.T. (2017). Fostering water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH) marketing exchanges using participatory processes: a guide for working with residents of informal settlements in the Pacific. International WaterCentre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from: http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/partners/wash-marketing-guidebook/ Souter, R.T., Barrington, D.J., Sridharan, S., Shields, K.F., Saunders, S.G., Meo, S., Bartram, J (2017). Research Brief: Fostering WASH marketing in informal Melanesian settlements. International WaterCentre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from:

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http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/policy-briefings/wash-marketing-research-brief-3/ Barrington, D.J., Sridharan, S., Saunders, S.G., Shields, K.F., Meo, S., Souter, R.T., Bartram, J. (2017). Programming Brief: Using participatory processes to engage informal settlements and enabling actors in improving WaSH. International WaterCentre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from: http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/policy-briefings/engaging-residents-of-informal-settlements-programmers-brief/ Sridharan, S., Barrington, D.J., Shields, K.F., Saunders, S.G., Souter, R.T., Meo, S., Bartram, J.(2017). Programming Brief: Towards WaSH programs that measure and enhance sustained wellbeing. International WaterCentre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from: http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/policy-briefings/have-do-be-programmers-brief/ Barrington, D.J., Sridharan, S., Souter, R.T., Saunders, S.G., Shields, K.F., Meo, S., Bartram, J. (2017). Programming Brief: Building on existing marketing exchanges in Melanesian informal settlements to improve WaSH. International WaterCentre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from: http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/policy-briefings/wash-marketing-exchanges-programmers-brief/ Shields, K.F., Souter, R.T., Barrington, D.J., Sridharan, S., Saunders, S.G., Meo, S., Bartram, J. (2017) Policy Brief: Melanesian WaSH policy environments to foster inclusive WaSH marketing exchanges. International Water Centre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from: http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/policy-briefings/wash-policies-brief/ Shields, K.F., Souter, R.T., Barrington, D.J., Sridharan, S., Saunders, S.G., Meo, S., Bartram, J.(2017). Policy Brief: Enabling systems that support sustainable, effective and inclusive WASH marketing exchanges. International WaterCentre: Brisbane, Australia. Available from: http://www.watercentre.org/resources/publications/policy-briefings/enabling-environments-policy-brief/

Flint Learns Tough Lessons in Risk Management. Interviewee for article in Business Insurance, 2016. http://www.businessinsurance.com/article/20161114/NEWS06/912310468/Flint-Michigan-polluted-water-supply-tough-risk-management-lesson.

La qualite de l’eau du robinet: je suis optimiste. Jamie Bartram. Interview published in Suez Environnement e-mag in November 2013 (http://www.emag.suez-environnement.com/jamie-bartram-professeur-cadre-oms-micropolluants-qualite-eau-21895).

Small Steps, Big Difference. Interviewed by Bob Ferguson, published in ‘Ferguson on the Frontline’, Water and Wastes Digest October 2012 p12.

Improved but not necessarily safe: Water access and the Millennium Development Goals. Bain, R.,

Wright, J., Yang, H., Pedley, S., Gundry, S. & Bartram, J. 2012, GWF Discussion Paper 1225, Global Water Forum, Canberra, Australia. Pp1–5. Available online at: http://www.globalwaterforum.org/2012/07/09/improved-but-not-necessarily-safe-water-access-and-

the-millennium-developmentgoals/.

Water + Health = Life. Jamie Bartram and Barbara Wallace, pp45–47 in Global Water Issues. Bureau of International Information Programs, US Department of State, Washington DC, USA, 2012 [co-author of article in book].

Water ‘Voice’ for Ford Motor Company Sustainability Report, J Bartram, 2012.

HWTS and Water Safety. J Bartram, 2012. Short article for Perspectives magazine (PATH).

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Evaluating Household Water Treatment Options: Health-based targets and microbiological performance specifications. World Health Organization, 2011, pp59. Provision of strategic direction and oversight (see acknowledgements).

Another View. Jamie Bartram p51 in The Environmental Forum Vol 28 No 4 July/August 2011 – the Policy Journal of the Environmental Law Institute.

Sanitation – A Sound Investment. Jamie Bartram. In Ignored: The Biggest Child Killer; the world is neglecting sanitation. WaterAid. London, 2010 (booklet produced for presentation at the UN MDG Summit).

Water Quality – The Basis for Healthy Living. Jamie Bartram. Pp8–9 in Stockholm Water Front, May 2010. URL: http://www.siwi.org/documents/Resources/Water_Front/WF-1-2010.pdf.

Interviewee for and quoted in Bloomberg Markets, special report on the global water crisis (article ‘Sanitation Nightmare by Jason Gale pp 110–120).

Interviewee for and quoted in Bloomberg news India and Pakistan, 4 March 2009.

WHO Key Role in Water Quality Interview with Jamie Bartram published in VEWIN (Dutch Association of Water Suppliers) Annual Report, 2007 pp 39–42.

Flexibility Required for Water Quality Targets. Havelaar A and Bartram J. Letter response on the use of disability-adjusted life years in setting water quality standards. Water 21 February 2006, p12.

New International Guidelines for Recreational Waters could help us decide where we go swimming.

Interview with Jamie Bartram and others, published in The Source, 2001

New Approach in WHO Drinking-water Guidelines. Interview with Jamie Bartram published in ‘Water 21’. IWA Publishing, London, 2000.

Bartram, J. Book review of Water resources: health, environment and development, Kay B (Ed) E&FN Spon, London, 1999. Review published in Bull WHO 77(6), 1999 p532.

Water Quality and Human Health. Bartram J. Thematic Paper prepared for Vision 21 process, reviewed by a Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council Expert Group Meeting in Wageningen, The Netherlands; April 1999 and published on WWW at http:/www.wsscc.org/vision21/docs/index.html.

Effective and Low-cost Practices that Enhance Environmental Quality. Bartram J and Pruess A in New World Water 1999. Sterling Publications, London UK, 1999.

Safe Water. Bartram J and Howard G in Health in the Commonwealth – Challenges and Solutions 1998–99 pp 136–139. Kensington Publications Ltd, London UK, 1998.

Sanitation. Howard G and Bartram J in Health in the Commonwealth – Challenges and Solutions 1998–99 pp 145–147. Kensington Publications Ltd, London UK, 1998.

Solving Problems of Contaminated Waters and Wastewater. Bartram J and Marchandise P. in Anon New World Water 1998 pp 35–38, Sterling Publications Ltd, London UK, 1998.

Shaping Water Research to Meet the Demands of the 21st Century. Bartram J. Water Quality International December 1997. IAWQ. London, UK.

Global Focus. J Bartram. Water Quality International pp9–11.

The Black Sea in Crisis. Article on EHPonline including extracts from an interview with J Bartram.

http://www.ehponline.org/docs/1997/105-12/forum.html

Drinking Water and Health in the Wider Europe. Bartram J. in Aubrey S (Ed) World Water 1996, Sterling Publications Ltd London UK, 1996.

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Guest Editor for April edition of magazine ‘Waterlines’ on theme of Cholera, 1994.

Oxfam DelAgua Portable Water Testing Kit Users’ Manual, 3rd edition, 1993. Co-author.

Bartram J, Book review of Waste Stabilisation Ponds: A Design Manual for Eastern Africa, Mara DD, Alabaster GP, Pearson HW and Mills SW. Lagoon Technology International, Leeds 1992. Review published in Waterlines, 1993.

Drinking Water Monitoring and Surveillance. Rickards A and Bartram J. Africa Health, November 1993, FSG Communications Ltd, Cambridge UK.

The Urban Poor, Sanitation and Public Health. Howard, G and Bartram J. Africa Health, November 1993, FSG Communications Ltd, Cambridge UK.

Improving Urban Sanitation in Developing Countries Howard G and Bartram J in Paine L (Ed) New World Health pp 88–90. Sterling Publications Ltd, 1993.

Bartram J and Howard G, Book review of Surface Water Treatment in Developing Countries; by C R Schultz and D Okun London, IT Publications, 1992. Review published Vol II No.2, August 1993.

Guest editor of April 1992 edition of Magazine ‘Waterlines’ on theme of Water and Sanitation in the Andes.

Water Quality Monitoring and Assessment GEMS Report Series No 12. Bartram J (Ed). Report of a workshop held in Arusha, Tanzania 23 March–3rd April 1992. United Nations Environment Programme, Nairobi 1992.

Bartram J, Book Review of Community Health and Sanitation (Edited by C Kerr; Intermediate Technology Publications, 1990). Review published in Science, Technology and Development, Vol 9 No 3, Dec 1991 pp 91–992.

Bartram J, A Revision of Membrane Filtration, Laboratory Practice, March 1986.

Invited Presentations

WET: Using Science to Influence International Science Policy. Jamie Bartram. ENVR in-house seminar series. 5th September 20-18.

Using Science to Influence International Science Policy. Jamie Bartram. UNC Institute for Marine Sciences, Morehead City, NC. 30th August 2018.

Clear thinking on water and health? Jamie Bartram with Mike Fisher*, Jackie Gibson and Karen Setty*. Invited presentation at University Club, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, 2nd July 2018.

The call of the Sustainable Development Goals and their challenges to ‘business as usual.’ Invited presentation at World Vision 2018 WaSH Forum: Towards Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Kigali, Rwanda, 23–25 April 2018.

What we are learning today and how it can help us improve in the SDG era. Invited presentation at World Vision 2018 WaSH Forum: Towards Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Kigali, Rwanda, 23–25 April 2018.

Invited interviewee at World Vision Houston Water Summit. St Regis Hotel, 4th April 2018.

Strong Women Strong World. Keynote luncheon Speaker at World Vision annual signature event, The Plaza Hotel, New York, NY, 1st December 2017.

Clear thinking on water and health? Jamie Bartram with David Fuente, Mike Fisher*, Emma Kelly* and Karen Setty*. Invited Oxford Water Network Seminar, Christchurch College, University of Oxford, 23 November 2017.

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Where is Water Safety Planning Going Globally and how can SSPs Support WSPs. Jamie Bartram and Karen Setty. Invited Presentation at: The Way Forward After Havelock North: new ideas for ensuring safe drinking-water. IWA-New Zealand and Water-New Zealand, 19th September 2017, Hamilton, New Zealand.

Invited (sole) Speaker, President’s Dinner, Water-New Zealand Annual Conference, 19th September 2017

Community-Managed Water Systems. Jamie Bartram and Meghan Miller*. Invited presentation at Water-New Zealand annual conference, 20–22 September 2017, Hamilton, New Zealand.

Accelerating Impact: plenary interview conducted by Greg Allgood. World Vision WaSH Community of Practice Meeting, Livingstone, Zambia, 25 – 27 April 2017

The Role of the Protocol on Water and Health in Achieving the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Jamie Bartram. Invited (sole) keynote presentation and member of high-level panel on the same theme. 4th session of the Meeting of the Parties to the Protocol on Water and Health, Palais des Nations, Geneva, 14–16 November 2016. Convened by UN/ECE and WHO/EURO.

Legionella and Emerging Microbial Risks in Buildings. Jamie Bartram. Panel speaker on plenary panel at International Emerging Technology Symposium 10–11 May 2016, Rosemont, Illinois.

Water and Health: Sustainable Development Goals. Jamie Bartram. Invited seminar presented at University of the South Pacific, Vanuatu, 25th November 2015.

WaSH and the Sustainable Development Goals. Jamie Bartram. Seminar sponsored by International Water Centre and Government of Australia/DFAT. State Library of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

Plumbing for Health. Jamie Bartram. The 31st Annual Lecture of the Worshipful Company of Plumbers, held at the Royal College of Physicians, London, as part of celebration of World Plumbing Day and the 650th year of the Company, Wednesday 11th March 2015 by the Chartered Institute of Plumbing and Heating Engineering (CIPHE), the Worshipful Company of Plumbers, the Royal Institute of Public Health and the Society of Public Health Engineers.

Round Table Chair on “The Way Forward” at one-day Conference “Plumbing for Health”, Royal Society for Public Health and Worshipful Company of Plumbers, 11th March 2015, 28 Portland Place, London.

McMaster Water Week, McMaster Distinguished Lecture on Water, Technology and Global Public Health: Billions at risk? Public health and realizing the human right to water through policy and technology. Jamie Bartram. McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 8th October 2014.

Barriers, partners and knowledge needs. Panel speaker at WHO Consultation on Water Sanitation and Hygiene in Health Care Facilities, 22–23 April 2014, Madrid, Spain.

Standards and Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality. Jamie Bartram. Panel speaker at WHO-UN/Water-Spanish Ministry of Health international workshop on Tools for Improving Drinking Water Quality, 21st April 2014, Madrid, Spain

Recorded presentations at Sanitation and Water for All meeting Nov 2013

1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3h25kJWzD3A

2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxu5XOP04VU

Water and Health. Jamie Bartram. Plenary Keynote presentation at Conference WaSH for Everyone Everywhere, Brisbane, Australia, 24–25 March 2014. Excerpts from the video recording of this presentation were re-presented by IWC staff at the WEDC Conference in Hanoi, September 2014 and at the UNC Water and Health Conference in October 2014.

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What is ‘safe’ water and sanitation? Jamie Bartram. Part of US Water Partnership Webinar, 23rd January 2014. 100 participants.

WaSH Research at the Water Institute at UNC. J Bartram and P Kolsky. Hosted by Emory University Center for Global Safe Water. 25th October 2013.

Getting Wet, Clean and Healthy. J Bartram. First Keynote presentation and panelist (the other panelist was Lester Brown, on ‘What happens when the well goes dry’). Hilton Humanitarian Symposium: Humanitarianism and Technology – a global game changer. Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York, NY, 24th October 2013.

UNC’s Water Research and Researchers. Speaker and panel member for Panel ‘Water’, part of the installation celebrations surrounding the installation of UNC’s new Chancellor, Carol Folt. Carolina Inn, Chapel Hill, NC, 11th Oct 2013.

Future of Water and Health. Jamie Bartram. Invited independent speaker at Suez Environnement briefing to media, Paris, June 2013.

Earth’s Challenges: Global Climate Change and Water Issues. Jamie Bartram. One of two presenters (other: Berrien Moore, University of Oklahoma) at ‘Featured Enrichment Session’ May 10th 9:30–10:30 of UNC General Alumni Association Spring Reunion, May 9–12 2013.

Technology for Water and Health in Rural Water Settings. Jamie Bartram and Georgia Kayser. Invited presentation in scientific symposium Water Purification and Monitoring under Minimal Resource Setting. American Academy for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual conference: the beauty and benefits of science 14–18 February 2013, Boston, Mass.

Chair, Water Use, Water Pollution and Biofuels. Institute of Medicine Roundtable on Environmental Health Sciences, Research and Medicine, 24th–25th January, 2013, National Academy of Sciences, Washington DC.

Water: A defining Challenge of 21st Century. Jamie Bartram. Evening guest speaker for East Chapel Hill Rotary Club. 22nd January 2013.

Global Monitoring of Water Safety. Jamie Bartram. Invited plenary presentation at WHO/UNICEF Consultation on the Formulation of Post-2015 Global WASH Goals, Targets and Indicators, The Hague, The Netherlands 3rd –5th December 2012.

Keynote Speaker at UNC’s University Day 12th October 2012 (the 219th anniversary of the founding of UNC). Speech available at: http://www.sph.unc.edu/schoolwide_news/bartram_to_speak_at_university_day_oct._12_24857_8289.html or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fqx7B4IRYlU

The World’s Water Crisis. Jamie Bartram. Stream Keynote presentation at World View Global Education Symposium. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Friday Center, October 24th 2012.

Water and Sanitation, Infectious Disease and Global Health. J Bartram. UNC Institute for Infectious Disease Friday seminar series (approx. 100 attendees). 14th Sept 2012.

ADD WATERAID MEET PRESENTATION TITLE at the 2nd International Meeting of WHO/UNICEF post-2015 Working Group on Water of JMP Process for Developing Enhanced Goals, Targets and Indicators for Global Monitoring of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene beyond 2015, 28–29 June 2012, WaterAid, London.

Development of targets and monitoring for post-2015 global WaSH monitoring. Jamie Bartram. Presentation to WHO Expert meeting on sampling and statistical aspects of the rapid assessment of drinking-water quality, June 18–19 June 2012, Chateau de Penthes, Geneva.

Presentation to WEHAC on microbial growth related hazards in water pending end June 2012

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Presentation to Advisers and PhD students on monitoring of global water and sanitation related exposures Cannes end June 2012 pending next section?

Water Reuse: Global Lessons Learned for the MENA Region and Key Considerations to Ensure Safety. J Bartram and J Lobuglio. Presentation to Discussion Panel, World Bank 2 May 2012.

H2O Carolina. J Bartram. Presentation to UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health Faculty and Staff Meeting. April 26th, 2012.

State of Water and Sanitation: how secure is water for people. Plenary Keynote at University of Oxford International Security Conference: Water Security, Risk and Society, St Hugh’s College, Oxford, UK, 16–18 April 2012.

Chair (‘discussant’) of parallel session on water security: WaSH goals, targets and metrics for the next 25 years at University of Oxford International Security Conference: Water Security, Risk and Society, St Hugh’s College, Oxford, UK; 16–18 April 2012.

Health Sciences Perspective. Keynote presentation at session 2 (opportunities and challenges) of the Wellcome Foundation workshop on Impact of Global Environmental Change on Water and Human Health: Building Integrated Research and Translation to Understand & Address the Challenges with an emphasis on Low-Middle Income Countries (LMICs). London, 21–23 March 2012.

Lessons Learned from Monitoring Progress Towards the MDG 7c Target for Water Supply and Sanitation, and the Implications for Future Targets and Monitoring. Jamie Bartram. Presentation to first Working group meeting on Post-2015 Water Targets, Marseilles, March 2012 (participation through electronic link).

Water and Health – Global to Local. MC, keynote speaker and co-developer for a half day workshop for Carolina Women’s Leadership Council, the Blue Zone at Kenan Stadium, UNC, Chapel Hill, 1st March 2012.

Environmental Responsibility: Whose Job Is It? Speaker and Panelist at Panel Discussion, convened by the Parr Center for Ethics, Nov 10 2010, Stone Center, UNC-Chapel Hill.

Building Communities: The Changing Principles of International Development – what does sustainability mean and how do we achieve it? Jamie Bartram. First keynote address. Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group World Water Summit IV, Friday May 20, 2011, New Orleans, USA.

Lessons Learned from Monitoring Progress Towards the MDG 7c Target for Water Supply and Sanitation, and the Implications for Future Targets and Monitoring. Jamie Bartram. Keynote presentation at WHO and UNICEF First Consultation on Post-2015 Water and Sanitation Targets, Berlin, 3–5 May 2011.

Water Sanitation and Hygiene in Developing Countries. Jamie Bartram. Invited Opening General Session Keynote speaker at Water Environment Federation Disinfection Conference, April 10–12 2011, Cincinnati, Ohio.

International relations in practice: how a specialised agency such as WHO collaborates with government institutions, universities, medical schools, NGOs, national research institutions to achieve its core functions. Jamie Bartram. Invited presentation at Syracuse University NY summer course on International Relations, 14 or 21 July 2010, John Knox Centre, Geneva.

Health Systems and Sanitation: Opportunities and Obstacles. Jamie Bartram and Oliver Cumming. Invited presentation to joint meeting of DfID Health and WaSH advisers, London, July 2010.

How to Design Water Projects to Meet WHO’s Water Quality Standards by Incorporating Monitoring and Evaluation into Projects. Jamie Bartram. Workshop speaker and facilitator Rotary International ‘Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group’ (WASRAG) World Water Summit III,

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June 19 2010, Montreal, Canada (two separate workshops for Rotarians with different levels of experience and expertise); also lunchtime table speaker at same.

Drinking-water and Sanitation – what works? Jamie Bartram. 8th April 2010. Presentation to UN General Assembly ‘MDG Summit’ interactive session with academia on MDGs; participate in discussions with delegations as panelist. Presentation available at http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/informal_sessions.shtml

Chair of session on the benefits of water supply and sanitation policies, including making an introductory presentation at international expert workshop on water economics and financing, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris, France. 15–17 March 2010.

The Resilience of Water Supply and Sanitation in the Face of Climate Change. Jamie Bartram. Keynote presentation at the 5th Sanitation Community of Practice meeting, Sanitation for Climate Change and Adaption, hosted by CIWEM in the Institution for Mechanical Engineers, One Birdcage Walk, London; 26th November 2009.

Water Safety Plans: lessons learned from implementation. J Bartram. IWA-organized workshop on Water Safety Plans, IWA Development Congress: Water and Sanitation Services: What works in Developing Countries? Hotel Sheraton, Mexico DF, 15–19 November 2009.

Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage: complementary strategies for increased access to safe water, J Bartram. HWTS-Network workshop Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage as a complementary strategy for increasing access to safe water for all, IWA Development Congress: Water and Sanitation Services: What works in Developing Countries? Hotel Sheraton, Mexico DF, 15–19 November 2009.

Monitoring: a tool in achieving progressive water quality benchmarks, J Bartram. Presentation in Aquatest workshop on Water Testing in Resource-poor Settings?” IWA Development Congress: Water and Sanitation Services: What works in Developing Countries? Hotel Sheraton, Mexico DF, 15–19 November 2009.

Water Quality Issues in Developing Countries, J Bartram. Presentation in UNESCO workshop on “Good Water Quality – Is It a Luxury for Developing Countries?” IWA Development Congress: Water and Sanitation Services: What works in Developing Countries? Hotel Sheraton, Mexico DF, 15–19 November 2009.

Next Generation Opportunities: solutions worth spreading (closing plenary keynote). J Bartram. IWA Development Congress: Water and Sanitation Services: What works in Developing Countries? Hotel Sheraton, Mexico DF, 15–19 November 2009.

Evolution of WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality, J Bartram. Presentation to WHO expert meeting on rolling revision of Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. WHO, Geneva, Nov 2009.

The Global Picture – Challenges and Solutions. Jamie Bartram. Keynote address at Royal Society for Public Health one-day conference ‘Water Challenges and Health’, 3rd November 2009.

Seeking Certainties in the Uncertain World of Water-borne Disease, J Bartram. First Rebecca L Calderon Distinguished Lecture, USEPA, Chapel Hill NC, October 19th, 2009.

Water-related Disease: Global Burden and Future Perspectives, J Bartram. First Keynote presentation at International Conference on Water Technologies for Emerging Regions, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, 26–27 October 2009.

Water Safety Plans: a new public health tool with a long history. J Bartram. Engineers without Borders UNC Chapter meeting, 1st Sept 2009.

Sustainable and Affordable Health: the role of water engineering and water engineers, J Bartram. American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers International Workshop:

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Engineering Solutions for Sustainable Development, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland; July 22–24 2009.

Vision 2030 study findings: can progress on drinking-water and sanitation withstand climate change? Guy Howard and Jamie Bartram (co-presenter and panelist) at launch of DfID-WHO report, 21st August 2009, Stockholm International Water Week.

What works in preventing water-related disease: new technological solutions? (discussant). Executive session on Grand Challenges of the Sustainability Transition, Harvard University and Venice International University, San Servolo, Italy, July 20–21 2009.

Global Perspectives on Disease Burden. Jamie Bartram. Invited keynote presentation for conference stream Water and Health. Singapore World Water Week, 22–26 June 2009.

Invited by Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to serve as an expert for the Expert Consultation on the Human Rights Obligations Related to Sanitation, Geneva; 27–29 April 2009.

Global Implementation of Water Safety Plans. Jamie Bartram. Invited presentation at Ozwater 09.Melbourne, Australia; 16–18 March 2009.

Water, Health and Sustainable Development. Jamie Bartram. University of Cambridge, Centre for Sustainable Development. Distinguished Lecture Series on Sustainable Development, 11th February 2009.

Human Right to Water: Drinking-water Policy Framework and Health Aspects. Invited presentation at the IELRC-SOAS Conference on Water Law Reforms and the Right to Water, 23–24 January 2009. International Environment House, Geneva.

Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Health – burden of disease in evidence based policy making and decision taking. Jamie Bartram. Invited presentation, WHO/Food Epidemiology Reference Group, Geneva, 17th November 2008.

Invited Speaker at Let's Stop the Stink: launch of the DFID water and sanitation policy.

28 October 2008, London, UK (event coordinated by DfID, ODI and WaterAid).

Status of Water and Sanitation. Jamie Bartram and Clarissa Brocklehurst. Presentation at the High-level Side Event on Water and Sanitation for All, 24 September 2008 (this was the only technical presentation to a panel including President of the Republic of Tadjikistan, Prime Minister of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Vice-Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany, United Nations Secretary General, President of the United Republic of Tanzania/Chairperson of the African Union and chaired by HRH Prince Willem Alexander, Chair of UNSGAB).

Health Implications of Sanitation without Water. Jamie Bartram. Invited keynote presentation to UNU/INWEH International Workshop: Sanitation: Innovations for Policy and Finance. Hamilton, Ontario, Canada 20–21 October 2008.

Water Safety Plans: Progress and Needs. Jamie Bartram. IWA Biennial Congress, Vienna, Austria, 10th September 2008.

Large Water Treatment Plants: Water Safety Plans. Jamie Bartram. IWA Biennial Congress, Vienna, Austria, 10th September 2008.

Water and Health: preventable disease and water management. Jamie Bartram. Conference keynote presentation 11th International River Symposium, Brisbane, Australia, 1–4 September 2008.

Safe Water in the Developing World – household water treatment and safe storage and on-site testing. Society for Applied Microbiology annual meeting “The Microbiology of Water in Work, Rest and Play”. Belfast 7–10 July 2008.

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Water and Sanitation Goals for the Rich and for the Poor. Jamie Bartram. Conference Keynote at 60th ‘Vakantiecursus in Drinkwatervoorziening’, Technical University, Delft, Netherlands, 11th January 2008.

The Global Challenge of Water Quality and Health. Jamie Bartram. Conference Keynote, Singapore International Water Week, Singapore, 24–25 June 2008.

Sustainable Infrastructure for Drinking-water and Sanitation in the Developing World. Jamie Bartram. Keynote for MIT and University of Cambridge Workshop on Engineering for Sustainable Development. Institution of Civil Engineers, London, April 21–22 2008.

Keynote presentation IRAR-IWA-WHO Conference on Water Safety Plans. May 2008, Lisbon, Portugal.

Health issues – calcium and magnesium in drinking water. Jamie Bartram. Keynote workshop presentation at British Water Conference “Water hardness: Consequences for Health and Energy, 28th November 2007, Hotel Russel; London, UK.

WHO Activities in Water, Sanitation and Health and in Chemical Safety. National Institute of Public Health, Tokyo, Japan, 13th Sept 2007.

Sanitation and Health in the MDGs. Jamie Bartram. Invited keynote presentation at Workshop: Millennium Development Goals for Water Sanitation and Poverty. Stockholm World Water Week, Stockholm, Sweden, 12–18 August 2007.

MDGs, Targets and WHO strategy. Invited workshop keynote presentation, Institute of Medicine Forum on Microbial Threats Water Planning Meeting, New York, 13–14 March 2007.

Water, Health and the Millennium Development Goals. Jamie Bartram. Keynote presentation to meeting of CEOs of Dutch Association of Water Suppliers (‘VEWIN’) with Prince of Orange. Amsterdam 5th December 2006.

Water and Health: Science for Policy? Jamie Bartram. US Institute of Medicine Microbial Risk Assessment Colloquium, 6–10 October 2006, University of Arizona, Tucson, USA.

Drinking-water: Where Science Meets Policy. Building on Snow’s Legacy of Evidence-based Intervention. Jamie Bartram. Pumphandle lecture, 19 September 2006 London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Water, Health and the Millennium Development Goals. Jamie Bartram. Invited conference keynote presentation, IWA Biennial Congress, Beijing China, 10–15 September 2006.

Health Aspects of Plumbing. Jamie Bartram. Invited plenary presentation, Centennial Congress of IPHE, Torquay, UK, 2–5 June 2006.

Water, Health, Development and Economic Sustainability. Jamie Bartram. GATI (Global Area and Thematic Initiative) Water Resource Public Lecture. Michigan State University, Centre for Water Sciences, 5 April 2006.

4th World Water Forum, Mexico, 16–22 March 2006. Invited speaker and panelist on Integrated Water Resources Management.

Water and Human Health in Developing Countries and Disadvantaged Communities. Jamie Bartram. Conference Keynote at Safe Drinking-water: Where Science Meets Policy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA, 16–17 March 2006.

WHO, Drinking-water and Health. Jamie Bartram. Presentation at IWA Health-related Water Microbiology Symposium, 7–9 Sept 2005, University of Wales, Swansea.

Drinking-water and Sanitation Monitoring. Jamie Bartram. Invited plenary presentation and panellist to main session of Commission on Sustainable Development 13th Session, New York; 12–22 April 2005.

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Wastewater Treatment, recycling and reuse. Jamie Bartram. Invited plenary presentation and panellist to main session of Commission on Sustainable Development 13th Session, New York; 12–22 April 2005.

Preparation towards CSD13. Jamie Bartram. Invited Presentation at planning session during Stockholm Water Week, August 2004.

Sanitation and Safe Use of Wastewater. Presenter and Panelist in Plenary Discussion at (inter-governmental) Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD), 12th Session, New York 21–28 April 2004.

Drinking-water and sanitation monitoring for MDG Goal 7 Target 10. Jamie Bartram. Keynote speaker and panelist at plenary session, 12th Session of Commission on Sustainable Development, New York 21–28 April 2004.

Rights-based Approaches. Jamie Bartram. Introductory speaker to plenary session including 12th Session of Commission on Sustainable Development, New York 21–28 April 2004.

Water and Health: Two Cross-cutting Themes in the Millennium Development Goals. Jamie Bartram. Invited conference keynote presentation. IWA Biennial Congress, Marrakech, 19–24 September 2004.

International Developments in Water Management. Jamie Bartram. Conference keynote presentation, Enviro04, 28 March–1 April 2004, Sydney, Australia.

Harmonising Guidelines for Control of Water-related Hazards. Jamie Bartram. Session keynote, Enviro04, 28 March–1 April 2004, Sydney, Australia.

Developments in the WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality and the ‘Framework for Safe Drinking-water. Jamie Bartram. Presentation at second IWA Expert Symposium for development of the ‘Bonn Charter’. 9–12 February, Bonn, Germany.

New Developments in the WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Jamie Bartram. Conference in Drinking Water in Europe 12–14 Oct 2003 Kuopio, Finland.

Achieving Sustainability: Poverty Elimination and the Environment: Where Next? Presentation at University of Loughbrough, 9 April 2003.

Toxic Cyanobacteria in Recreational Water. Jamie Bartram. European Commission Expert Meeting on Incorporation of Standards to Protect Health against Algal Hazards in Bathing Waters, 22 May 2003, Brussels.

New Developments in the WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Jamie Bartram. Presentation at European Commission Consultation on Potential Revision of Drinking Water Directive, 2003.

Water for the Future. Jamie Bartram. Invited keynote presentation to Royal Institute of Public Health Symposium: Safe Drinking Water for Developing Countries: What is the Best Way Forward? 10 July 2002.

Co-organiser and keynote presentation at WHO-IWA Seminar ‘Development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water, Wastewater Reuse and Recreational Waters’. 12 April 2002 at IWA Congress 18–12 April 2002, Exhibition Centre, Melbourne, Australia.

Effective Approaches to Manage the Safety of Drinking-water. Jamie Bartram. Invited conference keynote presentation, Health Canada 11th National Conference on Drinking-water, 27–30 April 2002, Halifax, Nova Scotia.

WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality and the ‘Framework for Safe Drinking-water. Jamie Bartram. Keynote presentation at AWWA, Eureau, WSAA meeting on Drinking-water Regulation, 8–10 October 2001; Bonn, Germany.

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Waterborne Diseases – even in countries like Germany? J Bartram. Institut fur Wasser, Boden und Lufthygien, Berlin, Germany, 2000.

Water and Gender. J Bartram. Presentation at the Special Session on Water and Gender hosted by SIMAVI at the Second World Water Forum, The Hague, 17–22 March 2000.

WHO Water-related Guidelines and Approach to the Development of the Third Edition of the Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Jamie Bartram. Second Environmental Risk Engineering Seminar, Graduate School of Engineering, Hokkaido University, Japan, July 1999.

Emerging Issues on Waterborne Pathogens. Jamie Bartram. American Water Works Association International Conference on Emerging Pathogens and Water Safety, Milwaukee, USA, August 29–September 1, 1999.

Closing plenary speaker, Second International Conference on the Safety of Water Disinfection, Miami; 15–17 November 1999.

Protecting Public Health: Guidelines and Management of Health Risks from Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water. Jamie Bartram. Invited plenary presentation at Lake ’99, Copenhagen, May 1999.

Plumbing, Health and the World Health Organization. Invited presentation at the annual meeting of the World Plumbing Council, Zurich, Switzerland, May 1999

International Developments in Water Microbiology Jamie Bartram. (Invited conference keynote presentation), UK PHLS (United Kingdom Public Health Laboratory Service) Standing Conference on Water Microbiology. Central Public Health Laboratory, London, March 1999.

Invited speaker, OECD International Workshop on Communicating Emerging Water Quality Issues,

Interlaken, Switzerland, August 1998 [doc refs to 19 Aug but ? this matches the OECD meet

and the phone No was for the States: 1-303-730 0851

Opening plenary presentation for the Conference on Water, Sanitation and Health –Resolving Conflicts between Drinking Water Demands and Pressures from Society’s Wastes, 24–28 November 1998 in The Institute for Water Soil and Air Hygiene, Bad Elster, Germany.

Other Presentations and Posters

WRF Project 4748: Comparative Evaluation of Risk Management Frameworks and tools for Managing Source Water Risks in the United States. Setty K, McConnell B, Raucher B, Luh J and Bartram J. Poster presented at Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, Chapel Hill NC, USA October 29-Nov 2, 2018.

Health beliefs matter: evidence from an evaluation of water and sanitation programme implementation in rural Ethiopia. Godfrey S, Ambelu A, Bevan J, Cronk R, Fleming L and Bartram J. Verbal presentation at conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, October 29-Nov 2, 2018.

Comparative evaluation of risk management frameworks and tools for managing source water risks in the United States. Karen Setty, Robert McConnell, Robert Raucher, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram. Poster presented at conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, October 29-Nov 2, 2018.

Time Series Study of Weather, Water Quality and Acute Gastroenteritis at Water Safety Plan Implementation Sites in France and Spain (verbal presentation). KE Setty*, JF Loret, J Enault, C

Puigdomenech Serra, J Martin Alonso and J Bartram. Conference: Nexus 2018: Water, Food, Energy and Climate, April 16-18, 2018 in Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

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History of Water Safety Plans. Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at one day workshop on experience and future of Water Safety Plans in France, Agence de l'Eau Seine-Normandie (AESN), Paris, 8 Jan 2018.

Future of Water Safety Plans and recommendations for effective implementation. Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at one day workshop on experience and future of Water Safety Plans in France, Agence de l'Eau Seine-Normandie (AESN), Paris, 8 Jan 2018.

History of Water Safety Plans. Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at workshop Water Safety Planning: measuring gains and implementing effective practices, Cetaqua, Barcelona, 9th January 2018.

Future of Water Safety Plans and recommendations for effective implementation. Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at workshop Water Safety Planning: measuring gains and implementing effective practices, Cetaqua, Barcelona, 9th January 2018.

Time Series Study of Weather, Water Quality and Acute Gastroenteritis at Water Safety Plan Implementation Sites in France and Spain (poster). KE Setty*, JF Loret, J Enault, C

Puigdomenech Serra, J Martin Alonso and J Bartram. Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, Chapel Hill, 16–20 October 2017.

Research Priorities under Goal 6 and Research and Learning Challenges among Global Partners

of Sanitation and Water for All (verbal presentation). Karen Setty*, Jamie Bartram and Mats Leifels. Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, Chapel Hill, 16–20 October 2017.

A systematic review to characterize the status of coverage, health outcomes, and management practices associated with WaSH in health systems in the WHO European Region (verbal

presentation). L. Joca*, L. S. Abebe*, M. Leifels and J. Bartram. World Health Organization Meeting on Water Sanitation and Hygiene in Health Care Facilities, Bonn, Germany, 27–28 September 2017.

Improving Practices for Drinking Water Safety, Stability, and Resilience. Karen Setty* and Jamie

Bartram. Interactive poster (a poster plus a 1-minute lightning presentation) at Toward a Carolina Improvement Science Initiative: A Lightning Symposium Friday, May 19, 2017, Carolina Club, George Watts Hill Alumni Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

How to make research and evaluation work for you (breakout session). Jamie Bartram, Kaida Liang and Emily Madsen. World Vision WaSH Community of Practice Meeting, Livingstone, Zambia, 25 – 27 April 2017

Opportunities for Global Leadership (breakout session). Jamie Bartram, Kaida Liang and Emily Madsen. World Vision WaSH Community of Practice Meeting, Livingstone, Zambia, 25 – 27 April 2017

Water Safety Planning: Measuring Water Quality, Health and Performance Gains (poster). Setty KE*, Kayser GL*, Bowling JM, Loret JF, Enault J, Puigdomenech Serra C, Martin Alonso J, Pla

Mateau A and Bartram J. NCAWWA Conference, Raleigh NC, 14th November 2016.

MWA Water Quality Study (verbal presentation). Shields S Karon AJ, Christenson E, Ambelu A,

Liang K and Bartram J. Conference Water and Health: where science meets policy, UNC Chapel Hill NC, USA, 10–14 Oct 2016.

Improving Community Wellbeing through Marketing Exchanges: insights from a participatory action research study on WaSH in four Melanesian countries (poster). Shields K, Barrington D, Sridharan

S, Saunders S, Souter R, Meo S and Bartram J. Conference Water and Health: where science meets policy, UNC Chapel Hill NC, USA, 10–14 Oct 2016.

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Assessing the Costs and Benefits of Water Safety Plans (poster). Loret JF, Blaudin de The C;

Martin Alonso J, Puigdomenec Serra C, Kayer G and Bartram J. IWA Global Congress, Brisbane, Oct 2016.

Integrating Climate Change Adaptation and WaSH in the Pacific (panel presentation). Shields K,

Kearton A, Souter R, MacDonald M, Hadwen W, Elliott M, Powell B and Bartram J. WaSH Futures Conference, Brisbane, 16–20 May 2016.

Functions of an Enabling System to Enable Marketing Exchange Systems in Informal Melanesian Communities (poster). Shields KF, Souter R, Barrington D, Meo S, Sridharan S, Saunders S and

Bartram J. WaSH Futures Conference, Brisbane, 16–20 May 2016.

WaSH in Peri-Urban Informal Settlements: Access, Sustained Use, and Well-Being (verbal presentation). Sridharan, S., Barrington, D.J., Saunders, S.G., Meo, S., Souter, R.T., Shields, K.F.,

Bartram, J. (2016). WASH Futures Conference, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Identifying and fostering WaSH (business) enterprises in the Pacific Saunders (verbal

presentation), S.G., Barrington, D.J., Sridharan, S., Meo, S., Souter, R.T., Shields, K.F., Bartram,

J. (2016). WASH Futures Conference, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Supporting WaSH marketing exchange in the Pacific (verbal presentation). Shields, K.F., Souter,

R., Barrington, D.J., Meo, S., Saunders, S.G., Sridharan, S., Bartram, J. (2015). Water and Health Conference, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.

Study Design and Sampling household stored water and community source: the impacts of geography on the determinants of microbial water quality in rural Ethiopia (poster). Shields K,

Christenson E, Ambelu A and Bartram J. Conference Water and Health: where science meets policy. UNC, Chapel Hill, 26–30 Oct 2015.

Buy, Give, Take and Share: WaSH Marketing Exchange in the South Pacific (verbal presentation).

Barrington D, Sridharan S, Souter R, Saunders S, Meo S, Shields K and Bartram J. Conference Water and Health: where science meets policy. UNC, Chapel Hill, 26–30 Oct 2015. doi: 10.13140/RG.2.1.5158.9207

On-Line Decision-support Tools for Managing Emerging Pathogen Risks in Wastewater (platform

presentation). Kelsey Pieper, Joe Zabinski, Jackie MacDonald Gibson, Jamie Bartram, Mark Sobsey. WEFTEC 2015.

Toward a rapid enzymatic method for detection of coliform bacteria in water (poster). Jianyong

Wu*, Jill R. Stewart, Glenn W. Walters, Mark D. Sobsey, Chris Cormency, Jamie K. Bartram. Water Microbiology Conference, Chapel Hill NC, USA, May 18–21 2015.

An Analysis of the Vulnerability of Global Drinking Water Access to Climate-related hazards (verbal

presentation). Elliott, M.; Banerjee, O.; Christenson, E.; Holcomb, D.; Hamrick, L.; Bartram, J. AGU Fall meeting 2014.

Understanding demand and fostering sustainable WASH marketplaces in the Pacific (verbal

presentation). Souter, R., Barrington, D.J., Saunders, S.G., Sridharan, S., Bartram, J., Amjad, U.Q.*, Aalbersberg, W., Meo, S., Live & Learn and Pacific Communities and Stakeholders (2014). WASH Conference, Brisbane, Australia, doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.1587.2086

Moderator at UNC General Alumni Association event: Consider this: Fracking, Energy and Our Energy Future”. Chapel Hill, 15th May 2014.

Differing Needs of Microbial Methods during a WSP for Large Urban Settings. Marion Savill, Melita

Stevens and Jamie Bartram. Oral presentation at Singapore World Water Week, 2014

Examining the influence of urban definition when assessing relative safety of drinking-water in Nigeria. Elizabeth Christenson, Robert Bain, Jim Wright, Stephen Aondoakaa, Rifat Hossain, and

Jamie Bartram. Poster presented at UNC Water Microbiology Conference, 5–7 May 2014.

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Global Assessment of Drinking-water Vulnerability to Climate Related Hazards. Elliott M, Banerjee

O, Christenson E, Holcomb D, Hamrick L and Bartram J. Poster presentation at Conference WaSH 2014: for everyone, everywhere, Brisbane, Australia, 24–26 March 2014.

Comparing MDG progress on Drinking-water and Sanitation: Why benchmarks Matter. Mark Elliott,

Oliver Cumming, Alycia Overbo and Jamie Bartram. Oral presentation at Conference WaSH 2014: for everyone, everywhere, Brisbane, Australia, 24–26 March 2014.

Global Assessment of Drinking Water Vulnerability to Climate-related Hazards. Elliott M, Banerjee

O, Christenson E, Holcomb D, Hamrick L and Bartram J. Poster presented at Nexus 2014: Water Food Climate and Energy, Chapel Hill, NC, USA, 5–8 March 2014.

Embedding a capability approach within sanitation marketing (poster). Barrington, D.J., Sridharan,

S., Saunders, S.G., Amjad, U.Q., Bartram, J., Shields, K.F., Souter,R., Meo, S., Aalbersberg, W. (2014). Water and Health Conference, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, U.S.A., doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.4208.6485

How Safe are Improved Sources: Faecal Contamination of drinking water in developing countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis (verbal presentation). Rob Bain, Ryan Cronk, Jim Wright,

Hong Yang, Tom Slaymaker and Jamie Bartram. WHO/UNICEF Task Force on Monitoring of Drinking-water Quality, Geneva, 20–22 November 2013.

Assessing the Impact of Climate Change Related Hazards on the Vulnerability of North Carolina Drinking Water Systems (verbal presentation). Luh J, Christenson E, Holcomb D, Hamrick L and

Bartram J. NC AWWA‐WEA 2013 Annual Conference, Nov 10, 2013.

Why Water utilities in North Carolina Would Use Water Safety Plans (verbal presentation). Amjad

U, Baum R, Luh J and Bartram J. NC AWWA‐WEA 2013 Annual Conference, Nov 10, 2013.

What do we know about the burden of disease from unsafe water and inadequate sanitation and hygiene practices? Chair of WHO workshop at the UNC Conference Water and Health, October 2013. Workshop 14th October 1:15–5:00 pm.

The relationship between distance to water source and water quantity: a systematic review (poster)

Williams AR*, Overbo A*, Bartram J. Water and Health Conference, Chapel Hill, NC, October 14–18, 2013

Microbiological and chemical quality of packaged drinking water in Freetown, Sierra Leone (poster).

Williams AR*, Fisher, MF*, Bain RES, Bartram, J. Water Microbiology Conference, Chapel Hill, NC, May 5–7, 2013.

To Share or Not to Share: health aspects and implications for targets and monitoring of water and

sanitation (verbal presentation). Evans B, Bartram J, Hunter PR, Williams AR*, Fisher, M*. Water and Health Conference, Chapel Hill, NC, October, 14–18, 2013

Comparing MDG progress on drinking water and sanitation: why benchmarks matter (verbal

presentation). Oliver Cumming, Mark Elliott, Alycia Overbo* and Jamie Bartram. WaSH 2014: for everyone everywhere conference, Brisbane, 24–28 March 2014.

Global Assessment of Drinking Water Access Vulnerability to Climate-Related Hazards (verbal

presentation). Mark Elliott, Ovik Banerjee, Elizabeth Christenson, Laura Hamrick and Jamie

Bartram. WaSH 2014: for everyone everywhere conference, Brisbane, 24–28 March 2014.

Overview of Proposals for Drinking Water Targets and Definitions (verbal presentation during

session ‘the good news and bad news of WaSH’). J Bartram. UNC ‘Water and Health’ Conference, Chapel Hill NC, 14–19 Oct 2013.

Technology for Water and Health in Rural Settings. Jamie Bartram and Georgia Kayser* (verbal presentation in session on Water Purification and Monitoring under Minimal Resource Setting). AAAS2013 Annual Meeting, Boston, 14–18 February 2013.

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Assessing the Impact of Climate Change Related Hazards on the Vulnerability of U.S. Drinking Water Systems (poster). Jeanne Luh*, Elizabeth C. Christenson, David A. Holcomb, Laura R.

Hamrick, and Jamie Bartram. UNC ‘Water and Health’ Conference, Chapel Hill NC, 14–19 Oct 2013.

High-Resolution, Population-Based Global Vulnerability Analysis of Drinking Water Access to

Climate-Related Hazards. Banerjee, O., M. Elliott, E. Christianson, D. Holcomb, L. Hamrick and J.

Bartram. 2013 AEESP 50th Anniversary Conference. Golden, Colorado. July 2013.

The sustainability check: a rural water supply and sanitation monitoring tool. Considerations for the design of sustainability monitoring systems for rural water supply and sanitation projects. Kristen

Downs*, Samuel Godfrey, Matteus van der Velden and Jamie Bartram. Oral presentation at Water for Health Conference, UNC, 29 Oct–2 Nov 2012.

Monitoring WaSH in Schools (WinS) post-2015 (verbal presentation). Jamie Bartram and Ryan Cronk*. Water for Health Conference, UNC, 29 Oct–2 Nov 2012.

The Future of International WaSH Monitoring – and why it matters for policy and practice (verbal

presentation). Jamie Bartram. University of Oklahoma WaTER Conference, Norman, Oklahoma, USA, 24–25 Oct 2011.

Future Microbial Methods Required for a Water Safety Plan. Marion Savill, Melita Stevens, Jan

Gregor and Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at Singapore International Water Week, 2011. [CHECK OR WAS THIS EARLIER ?]

Start with Water. J Bartram. Introductory presentation at Rotary International/WASRAG workshop at UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, October 2011.

Non-discrimination and equity in WaSH J Bartram. Introductory presentation at workshop on Human rights based indicators at UNC Conference Water for Health: where science meets policy, October 2011.

Water and Population. J Bartram. Presentation to Working Group Meeting on Population, Family Planning and Achievement of the Millennium Development Goals, Rizzo Conference Center, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Dec 1–3 2010

Cost-effectiveness analysis of drinking water quality monitoring practices in the developing world.

Jonathan Crocker and Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at IWA Development Congress, Kuala Lumpur.

A New Distance Learning Programme for WSPs. Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at IWA Water Safety Conference: Managing Drinking Water for Public Health. Kuching Malaysia, 2–4 Nov 2010.

Vision 2030 – a global perspective on climate change and drinking-water safety. Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at IWA Water Safety Conference: Managing Drinking Water for Public Health. Kuching Malaysia, 2–4 Nov 2010.

Coordination for Clean Water: a Comparison of institutional frameworks for managing drinking-

water quality. Rahman Z, Khush R, Crocker J and Bartram J. Verbal presentation at IWA Water Safety Conference: Managing Drinking Water for Public Health. Kuching Malaysia, 2–4 Nov 2010.

Health-based targets and Integrated Fluorosis Mitigation: A Case Study from Madhya Pradesh,

India. Sam Godfrey, Pawan Labhasetwar and Jamie Bartram. Verbal presentation at UNC Conference: Water for Health, Where Science Meets Policy. Chapel Hill, NC, USA, 25–26 October 2010.

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Water Safety Plans: a new public health tool with a long history. J Bartram. Opening presentation for workshop on water safety plans at UNC Conference: Water for Health, Where Science Meets Policy. Chapel Hill, NC, USA, 25–26 October 2010.

Water Quality and Health. J Bartram. Opening presentation for meeting of IWA Task Force on Water Quality and Health, UNC Conference: Water for Health, Where Science Meets Policy. Chapel Hill, NC, USA, 25–26 October 2010.

MDG WatSan Monitoring. J Bartram. Panel speaker at session “Consistent Monitoring to Track Progress towards the MDGs and beyond”. World Water Forum, Istanbul, March 15–22 2009.

Estimating the effects of water supply and sanitation interventions using cross-sectional surveys

and marginal structural models. J Scott, J.Bartram, L. Haller and J. Eisenberg. Poster presented at APHA Annual Conference, Philadelphia, November 2009.

Appropriate Microbial Methods Required in a Water Safety Plan, Marion Savill, Melita Stevens, Jan

Gregor and Jamie Bartram. Singapore World Water Week, June 2009.

Estimating causal effects using observational data: an alternative to randomized controlled trials. J

Scott, J.Bartram, L. Haller and J. Eisenberg. Am J Epidemiol 2008; 167(Suppl): S1–S147.

Interview at Stockholm Water Week by GPPN as a ‘Water Pioneer. Interview podcast available at http://www.stakeholderforum.org/index.php?id=712

Aquatest: Designing a Low-cost Water Test for the Developing World. Khush RS, Wright JA.

Sobsey MD, Bartram JK and Gundry SW. Poster presented at International Water Association/Specialist Group on Health-related Water Microbiology Conference, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 10–14 September 2007.

Testing the Waters: Realizing the Potential of Today’s Technologies to Guide Better Water

Management for Health. Bartram J. Introductory presentation to IWA/HRWM-WHO Joint Workshop, at IWA Health Related Water Microbiology Symposium, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 10–14 September 2007.

A New Annual Report on Drinking-water and Sanitation. Bartram J. UNSGAB-UN/Water Seminar on International Year of Sanitation, Stockholm World Water Week, Stockholm, Sweden, 12–18 August 2007.

WHO Guidelines for the Safe Use of Wastewater, Excreta and Greywater. Launch Presentation for

the 3rd Edition of the Guidelines. Bartram J. IWA Biennial Congress, Beijing China, 10–15 September 2006.

UN-Water. Bartram J. Presentation at Stockholm World Water Week, 20–26 August 2006.

Health Aspects of Calcium and Magnesium in Drinking-water. Bartram J. Introductory Presentation at NSF-ILSI International Symposium on Health Aspects of Calcium and Magnesium in Drinking-Water. 23–26 April, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

4th World Water Forum, Mexico, 16–22 March 2006. Bartram J. Chair for workshop on monitoring.

UNSGAB and UN/Water. Bartram J. Presentation made to meeting of UN Secretary General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation, Berlin, 20–21 February 2006.

JMP Update. Bartram J. Presentation made to meeting of UN Secretary General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation, Berlin, 20–21 February 2006.

UNSGAB and UN/Water. Bartram J. Presentation to meeting of United Nations Secretary General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation Meeting, Rome, 3–4 November 2005.

WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Bartram J. International Workshop on Small Community Water Supply Safety, Alice Springs, Australia, 18–22 July 2005.

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Clean Care is Safer Care – Safe Environments. Bartram J. World Alliance for Patient Safety May 2005 (presentation and discussant to side session of World Health Assembly at the launch of the Clean Care is Safer Care initiative).

Partnership to Health through Water. Bartram J. Commission on Sustainable Development 13th Session, New York, 12–22 April 2005

Sanitation Connection. Bartram J. Global WASH Forum, 29 Nov–3 Dec 2004, Dakar Senegal.

Practical Networking Experience: Promoting Safe Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage.

Bartram J. Global WASH Forum, 29 Nov–3 Dec 2004, Dakar Senegal.

The International Network to Promote Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage. Bartram J. IWA Biennial Congress, Marrakech, 19–24 September 2004.

International Launch of 3rd Edition of WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Bartram J. (Three presentations with same title: press conference, launch presentation and technical presentation). IWA Biennial Congress 19–24 September 2004.

The Millennium Development Goal on Water and Sanitation: A Mid-term Assessment of Progress. Speaker and panelist at press and technical launch of WHO-UNICEF Assessment report. Palais des Nations, Geneva, 26 August 2004.

Meeting the MDG Drinking-water and Sanitation Target: A mid-term Assessment of Progress.

Bartram J. Presentation made to first meeting of UN Secretary General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation, New York, 21–23 July 2004.

The water industry, health and development. Bartram J. Guest speaker at meeting of CEOs of Australian Water Industry. 1 April 2004.

Participant in OECD Round Table on Sustainable Development. 10 March, OECD, Paris.

Waterborne Disease – Evidence for Action. Bartram J. Prevention and Control of Waterborne Epidemics, 15–16 Dec 2003. WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.

Panelist for Opening session plenary panel discussion on Water Supply Sanitation Hygiene and Water Pollution at third World Water Forum, Tokyo, 16–23 March 2003.

New Developments in the WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Presentation to European Network of Drinking-water Regulators, Edinburgh 2–3 October 2003.

Water and Human Health. Bartram J and Sobsey MD. Presented at the IWA Health-related Water Microbiology Symposium, Cape Town, South Africa, 15–18 September 2003.

Emerging Issues in Water and Infectious Disease. Bartram J and Sobsey MD. Presented at the IWA Health-related Water Microbiology Symposium, Cape Town, South Africa, 15–18 September 2003.

Environmental Aspects and Perspectives for Eradication. Bartram J. Presentation of workshop theme at International Conference on SARS – Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome. Kuala Lumpur, 17–18 June 2003.

The International Network to Promote Safe Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage.

Bartram J. Introductory presentation at international symposium of same title, 4–5 June 2003.

Water Safety Plans – Risk Management for Water Supplies. Stevens M and Bartram J. Water Safety: Risk Management Strategies for Drinking Water, Berlin, 28–30 April 2003.

Guidelines for Safe Recreational Water Environments. Bartram J. 3rd World Water Forum, 17–21 March 2003, Kyoto, Japan.

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Water, Sanitation and Health [session chair]. Bartram J. 3rd World Water Forum, 17–21 March 2003, Kyoto, Japan.

Household Water Security and Quality [panel speaker]. Bartram J. 3rd World Water Forum, 17–21 March 2003, Kyoto, Japan.

Water Supply Sanitation, Hygiene and Water Pollution [wrap up plenary speaker – reporter for

sessions on sanitation and health]. Bartram J. 3rd World Water Forum, 17–21 March 2003, Kyoto, Japan.

The How, Where and Why of applying HACCP to Water. Stevens M, Deere D, Davison A, Smith D,

Bartram J, Mullenger J. (2002) Special Workshop – American Water Works Association Water Quality Technology Conference. Seattle, Washington. 10 November 2002. Co-organiser, speaker and discussion Chair. Presentation on Water Quality and Human Health.

Developments in the WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality. Bartram J. Presentation to European Network of Drinking-water Regulators, 28–29 October 2002, Edinburgh.

Environment and Health in Ports and Shipping. Bartram J. IATA Conference, Geneva, 13–14 June 2002.

Household Water Security E-Conference and Virtual Forum organised by UNICEF, WHO and HTN, October 14 to November 1, 2002 (weekly chairperson).

WHO Delegate and speaker to UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, discussion on the Right to Water, 22nd November 2002, Geneva, Switzerland

Participant, The Global Burden of Infectious Disease Through the Gastrointestinal Tract. 14–18 February 2002, Galway, Ireland.

Chair and speaker lunchtime session on WHO Guidelines, IWA Biennial World Water Congress, 15–18 October 2001 Vienna.

Water Quality Standards and Needs. Sobsey M and Bartram J. IWA Biennial World Water Congress, 15–18 October 2001 Vienna.

Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water. Ingrid Chorus, Ian Falconer, Henry Salas and Bartram J. Paper presented at the AIDIS International Conference, Lima, Peru November 1998.

Recreational Water Standards and Human Health. Bartram J and Salas H. Paper presented at the AIDIS International Conference, Lima, Peru November 1998.

The WHO perspective on healthy environment: the example of water quality. Bartram J. Paper presented at International Conference ‘Working Together for Better Health’, 23–25 September 1998, Cardiff, Wales, UK.

World Health Organization Guidance on Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water. Session Chair and session speaker at 4th International Conference on Toxic Cyanobacteria, Beaufort, North Carolina, September 1998.

Water for Human Health, Agricultural Development and Habitat. Bartram J. Paper presented at the Permanent Forum ‘Development and Environmental Sanitation: The Precious Gift of Water’ 26–27 June 1997, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Rome, Italy.

Priorities for Water-related Research. Bartram J. Paper presented at the third technical meeting of the European Network of Freshwater Research Organizations (‘Euraqua’), Rome, Italy, 1996.

Introductory speech on behalf of WHO at the Inauguration of the UNESCO International Congress on Climate and Environment, Rome, Italy, 4–8 March 1996.

Guideline Values. Bartram J. Paper presented at the Conference Hydrotop 1996, Marseilles, 16–18 April 1996.

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The Health Dimension of the Aral Sea Crisis. Bartram J, Background paper prepared on behalf of WHO for the International Conference on Sustainable Development in the Aral Sea Basin, Nukus, Karakalpakistan 18–20 September 1995 (also chair of working group on urgent human needs and civil society at the Conference and author of corresponding section of Conference report).

Analytical Quality Control: the Challenge in Developing Countries. Ray Briggs and Bartram J. Invited paper at GEMS/Water Consultation on Analytical Quality Control, January 1993, Burlington, Ontario, Canada.

Influence of Phosphate Concentration on the Levels of Heat Labile Enterotoxin Retrieved from

Cells of Enterotoxigenic E. coli. Bartram J and Lloyd B; Poster presented at IAWPRC Conference, Tubingen, Germany, 1990.

Field Evaluation of a Portable Water Testing Kit. Emes C, Bartram J; Rickards A and Lloyd B. Poster presented at IAWPRC Conference, Tubingen, Germany, 1990.

The Development and Implementation of a Water Surveillance and Improvement Programme for

Peru. Lloyd B, Pardon M and Bartram J; Paper presented at the American Society of Civil Engineers, International Conference on Resource Mobilisation for Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation in Developing Nations, San Juan, Puerto Rico, May 1987.

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Teaching, advising and mentoring (see Teaching Portfolio for summary of earlier teaching

activities)

Faculty Mentoring (post-doc mentoring is listed under student advising, below)

Mark Weir, 2017 to date

Member, mentorship committee for assistant professor of Environmental Health Sciences at Ohio State University.

Orlando Coronell, Jan 2013 to 2017

Mentor for tenure-track assistant professor at UNC. Orlando achieved associate professor status in 2017.

Jacqueline MacDonald Gibson,

Dec 2012 to 2015

Mentor for tenure-track assistant professor on Robert Woods Johnson Foundation PHSSR Mentored Research Scientist Development Award. Project Title: Racial Disparities in Access to Public Water and Sewer Service in North Carolina: An Analysis of Public Health Impacts and Policy Solutions.

Student Advising and Examination

Summary as of fall semester 2017:

Advisor or co-advisor of: At:

Current advisees: three post-doctoral researchers; three PhD and five Master’s students.

Completed advisees: 10 Post-doctoral researchers; seven PhD students; 23 Master’s students; and five undergraduate honors theses.

Committee member, external examiner or ‘opponent’ for: nine doctoral examinations; 15 Master’s examinations and five undergraduate honors theses.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

University of Iceland

Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich, Germany

University of Surrey, UK

University of Lausanne, Switzerland

Cranfield University, UK

University of Stockholm, Sweden

Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain

Current student and post-doc advisees

MS adviser, fall 2018 to date

Emily Browning +1 ENVR, UNC

PhD adviser fall 2018 to date

Meghan Miller, UNC.

Spring 2018 to date Carmen Anthonj, post-doctoral research fellow. Carmen’s post-doctoral work with the Water Institute led to the publication of:

Improving Monitoring and Water Point Functionality in Rural Ethiopia. Carmen Anthonj, Lisa Fleming, Ryan Cronk, Samuel Godfrey, Argaw Ambelu, Jane

Bevan, Emanuele Sozzi, Jamie Bartram. Water 2018, 10 (11), 1591; doi:10.3390/w10111591.

Health Risk Perceptions are Associated with Domestic use of Basic Water and Sanitation Services: evidence from rural Ethiopia. Anthonj C, Fleming L, Godfrey, S, Ambelu A, Bevan J; Cronk R and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 2112; doi:10.3390/ijerph15102112

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PhD committee member, fall 2017 to

date

Elizabeth Christenson (adviser: Stewart).

Post-doctoral researcher adviser,

summer 2017 to date

Ryan Cronk. Ryan’s post-doctoral work with the Water Institute led to the publication of:

Improving Monitoring and Water Point Functionality in Rural Ethiopia. Carmen Anthonj, Lisa Fleming, Ryan Cronk, Samuel Godfrey, Argaw Ambelu, Jane

Bevan, Emanuele Sozzi, Jamie Bartram. Water 2018, 10 (11), 1591; doi:10.3390/w10111591.

Health Risk Perceptions are Associated with Domestic use of Basic Water and Sanitation Services: evidence from rural Ethiopia. Anthonj C, Fleming L, Godfrey, S, Ambelu A, Bevan J; Cronk R and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 2112; doi:10.3390/ijerph15102112

A categorization of water system breakdowns: evidence from Liberia, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda. Ryan Cronk, Tori Klug; Katherine F Shields; Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 619–620, 1 April 2018, pp 1126–1132.

Seasonality, Water Use and Community Management of Water Systems in Rural Settings: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly, Katherine F. Shields, Ryan Cronk, Kristen Lee, Nikki Behnke, Tori Klug, Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 628–629, 1 July 2018, pp715–721. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.045

A systematic review of nosocomial waterborne infection in neonates and mothers. Michelle Moffa, Wilson Guo, Trudy Li, Ryan Cronk, Lydia Abebe,

Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 2017 Nov: 220(8): 1199-1206. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.07.011.

The role of social capital and sense of ownership in rural community-managed water systems: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly, Kristen Lee, Katherine F Shields, Ryan Cronk, Nikki Behnke, Tori Klug, Jamie Bartram. Journal of Rural Studies 2017 (56) 156–166

MS academic and research adviser, fall

2017 to date

Emma Kelly. MS

MS academic and research adviser, fall

2017 to date

Ghanja O’Flaherty. MS. Ghanja’s Master’s studies were associated with the publication of:

Assessing Operational Performance Benefits of a Water Safety Plan Implemented in South-western France. Setty, K. E., O’Flaherty, G., Enault, J., Loret, J.F. and Bartram, J. Perspectives in Public Health Vol 138 No 5, pp 270–278 Sept 2018. DOI: 10.1177/1757913918787846

MSPH academic and research

adviser, fall 2017 to date

Nikki (Nicole) Behnke. MSPH. Nikki won a Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship for the 2016-17 academic year for Arabic language and Middle East Area Study.

Fall 2017 to date Shannan George, PhD, NCSU, Committee member.

Fall 2017 to date Darcy Anderson. PhD. Darcy won a won a five-year fellowship in the Royster Society of Fellows from the Graduate School at UNC.

Fall 2017 to date Gabrielle Beaudry. BSc (Curriculum on Environment and Ecology). Gabrielle

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undergraduate summer research and honors thesis

adviser

was awarded a Tom and Elizabeth Long Research Award to support her senior honors thesis research project, “Sustainability of Solar Powered Mechanized Boreholes in Zambia: Community Participation at Varying Stages of System Functionality.”

Post-doctoral researcher adviser,

Summer 2017 to date

Musa Manga

MS Committee member, fall 2016 to

date

Nadia Mishal, UNC (advisor: Sobsey).

MSPH adviser fall 2015 to date

Hai-Ryung Sung, UNC. Hai-Ryung was a Rotary International Global Grant Scholarship recipient throughout her graduate studies. She was also awarded best essay among 200 participants from diverse fields of study at the Korean American Scientists and Engineers association (KSEA) conference, Texas, January 22-24, 2016.

PhD adviser, fall 2015 to date

Karen Setty, UNC. Karen won a won a five-year fellowship in the Royster Society of Fellows from the Graduate School at UNC, a UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health Merit Award (2015) and a National Institutes of Health T32 Traineeship in Environmental Biostatistics (2017). She and I also won a joint faculty-graduate student research award from the UNC Center for European Studies (2017); and she was awarded a 2019 Horizon Award Horizon Awards by UNC to recognize outstanding graduate student research that directly contributes to the educational, economic, physical, social or cultural well-being of North Carolina citizens.

Karen’s doctoral studies were associated with the publication of:

Time Series Study of Weather, Water Quality and Acute Gastroenteritis at Water Safety Plan Implementation Sites in France and Spain. Karen Setty, Jerome Enault, Jean-Francois Loret, Claudia Puigdomenech Serra, Jordi Martin and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2018 May; 221(4): 714-726. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.04.001

Water quality, compliance and health outcomes among utilities implementing Water Safety Plans in France and Spain. Karen E Setty, Georgia L Kayser, Michael Bowling, Jerome Enault, Jean-Francois Loret, Claudia Puigdomenech Serra, Jordi Martin Alonso, Arnau Pla Mateu and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 2017 220 (2017) 513–530.

Assessing Operational Performance Benefits of a Water Safety Plan Implemented in South-western France. Setty, K. E., O’Flaherty, G., Enault, J., Loret, J.F. and Bartram, J. Perspectives in Public Health Vol 138 No 5, pp 270–278 Sept 2018. DOI: 10.1177/1757913918787846

PhD Committee member, 2011 to

date

Yvonne Yuen, UNC (adviser: Sobsey).

Graduated students, by year of graduation (post docs by year of end of my advising)

Academic and thesis adviser for dual MS/MCRP (fall

2018)

Sarah Long, UNC. Sarah was awarded the 2015 UNC Chen-Yu Yen award in 2015 and a Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship for the 2016-17 academic year for Portuguese language and Latin America area study, renewed for 2017–8. She was further awarded a 2017 Pre-dissertation Field

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Research Grant from the Institute for the Study of the Americas for her project Street Level Bureaucrats as Anchors of Community-Managed Water and Sanitation Systems. Thesis: A Feasibility Study of a Dry Sanitation Alternative in North Carolina.

Double Master’s MSPH and MCRP.

Co-advisor (academic and

thesis adviser for MSPH) (fall 2018)

Lauren Joca, UNC. Thesis: A Systematic Review and Qualitative Analysis to Characterize the Status of WaSH in Health Systems in the WHO European Region. Lauren’s Master’s studies were associated with the publication of:

The Role of Energy in Health Facilities: a conceptual framework and complementary data assessment in Malawi. Suhlrie L, Bartram J, Burns J, Joca L, Tomaro J, Rehfuess E (2018) PLoS ONE 13(7): e0200261. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0200261

MSPH Committee member (fall 2018)

Brandie Banner MSPH Committee member. Thesis: Water Sanitation and Hygiene for the Forcibly Displaced: a Mixed-Methods Study on Budgeting and Monitoring.

MSPH academic and research

adviser (spring 2018)

Meghan Miller, UNC. Thesis: Financing solar-powered water systems in sub-Saharan Africa. Meghan supervised the work of an undergraduate student, Samara Green, during summer 2016. She continued to doctoral studies with me on graduation (see above).

Undergraduate summer research and honors thesis

adviser (spring 2018)

Frances Reuland. BSc (UNC, Department of Environment and Ecology). Fran was awarded a Tom and Elizabeth Long Research Award to support her senior honors thesis research project “The Relationship between Energy Availability and Environmental Health Conditions and Impacts on Health Service Delivery in Malawian Health Care Facilities”.

At the end of her final year Frances spent a summer working with the Water Institute and was selected for the elite James C. Gaither Junior Fellows Program run by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

MS academic and research adviser

(spring 2018)

Amy Guo, UNC. Thesis: Water Quality Predictors in Rural Healthcare Facilities in 14 Low- and Middle-Income Countries. Amy’s master’s studies were associated with the publication of

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in rural health care facilities: a cross-sectional study in Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia. Guo, Amy; Bowling, James; Bartram, Jamie; Kayser, Georgia. Am J Trop Med Hyg Volume 97, Issue 4, Oct 2017, p. 1033 – 1042; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.17-0208

Amy continued to work with the Water Institute as a Graduate Research Assistant on graduation.

MPH committee member (summer

2017)

Laura Ana Suhlrie, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany (adviser Rehfuess). Thesis: The Role of Modern Energy in Health Care Facilities: A conceptual framework and complementary data assessment in Malawi.

Laura’s MPH studies were associated with the publication of

The Role of Energy in Health Facilities: a conceptual framework and complementary data assessment in Malawi. Suhlrie L, Bartram J, Burns J, Joca L, Tomaro J, Rehfuess E (2018) PLoS ONE 13(7): e0200261. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0200261

Summer 2017 summer

undergraduate summer research

Ryan McCord. UNC.

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fellowship advisor

Summer 2017 summer

undergraduate summer research fellowship adviser

Lauren Eaves. BSc (UNC, Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering).

PhD adviser (spring 2017)

Vidya Venkataramanan, UNC. Vidya won a five-year fellowship in the Royster Society of Fellows from the Graduate School at UNC; and a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) Institutional Research Training Grants, supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) for 2013-14 (NIEHS T32 Training Grant, NIH T32ES007018, co-PIs: Herring and Fry). Vidya’s doctoral dissertation One Size Does Not Fit all: Analyzing Variations in the Implementation of Community-Led Total Sanitation included three journal manuscripts, published as:

Community-led Total Sanitation: a mixed-methods systematic review of evidence

and its quality. Venkataramanan V, Crocker J, Karon AJ and Bartram J. Environ Health Perspect 126(2), February 2018; DOI:10.1289/EHP1965.

Vidya’s doctoral studies were also associated with the publication of:

Building capacity for water, sanitation, and hygiene programming: training evaluation theory applied to CLTS management training in Kenya. Crocker J, Shields KF, Venkataramanan V, Saywell D and Bartram J. Social Science & Medicine Volume 166, October 2016, pp 66–76.

Vidya was appointed as a post-doctoral fellow at Northwestern University following completion of her PhD.

MS committee member (spring

2017)

Alison Fechter, UNC (adviser: Kolsky). Thesis: Water Committee Characteristics Affecting Water System Management in Northern Ghana. Alison went on to become the Director of Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning for the Water Project (a 501(c)(3) organization based in New Hampshire, USA.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser

(2012−2017)

Mike Fisher, UNC. Mike won a postdoctoral traineeship in Environmental Health Sciences through the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Environmental Biostatistics (BIOS) training program (NIEHS T32 Training Grant, NIH T32ES007018, co-PIs: Herring and Fry) for the 2012−13 and 2013−14 academic years. Mike’s post-doctoral work led to the publication of:

Carrying Water may be a Major Contributor to Disability from Musculoskeletal Disorders in Low Income Countries: a cross-sectional survey in South Africa, Ghana and Vietnam. Jo-Anne Geere, Jamie Bartram, Laura Bates, Leslie Danquah, Barbara Evans, Michael Fisher, Nora Groce, Batsirai Majuru, Michael M Mokoena, Murembiwa S Mukhola, Nguyen Viet Hung, Pham Duc Phuc, Ashley Rhoderick Williams, Wolf-Peter Schmidt and Paul R Hunter. J Global Health 2018 8(1) doi: 10.7189/jogh.08.010406.

Public health and social benefits of at-house water supplies. Final Report. Evans, B.; Bartram, J.; Hunter, P.; Williams, A.R.; Geere, J.A.; Majuru, B.; Bates, L.; Fisher, M.; Overbo, A.; Schmidt, W.P. University of Leeds, Leeds, UK (2013) (vi + 53 pages).

Global Monitoring of Water Supply and Sanitation: A critical review of history, methods, and future challenges. Jamie Bartram, Clarissa Brocklehurst, Mike Fisher, Rolf Luyendijk, Rifat Hossain, Tessa Wardlaw, and Bruce Gordon. Int. J.

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Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11, 8137−8165.

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Fecal Contamination and Inadequate Treatment of Packaged Drinking Water. Williams A, Bain R, Fisher M, Cronk R, Kelly E and Bartram J. PLoS ONE 2015.

Microbial and chemical quality of packaged, sachet water and stored household water in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Michael B. Fisher; Ashley R. Williams; Mohamed Jalloh; George Saquee; Robert E. S. Bain; Jamie K. Bartram. 2015. PLoS ONE 10(7): e0131772.

Understanding Handpump Sustainability: Determinants of Rural Water Source Functionality in the Greater Afram Plains Region of Ghana. Michael B. Fisher; Katherine Shields; Terence U Chan; Elizabeth Christenson; Ryan D. Cronk; Hannah Leker; Destina Samani; Patrick Apoya; Alexandra Lutz; Jamie Bartram. Water Resources Research Volume 51, Issue 10, October 2015, Pages 8431–8449.

Evaluating Mobile Survey Tools (MSTs) for field-level monitoring and data collection: development of a novel evaluation framework, and application to MSTs for rural water and sanitation monitoring. Michael B. Fisher, Ben H. Mann, Ryan D. Cronk, Katherine F. Shields, Tori L. Klug, Rohit Ramaswamy. Int J Environ Research Public Health, 13(9), 840; doi 10.3390/ijerph13090840; 2016.

Carrying water may be a major contributor to disability from musculoskeletal disorders in low income countries: a cross-sectional survey in South Africa, Ghana and Vietnam. Jo-Anne Geere, Jamie Bartram, Laura Bates, Leslie Danquah, Barbara Evans, Michael Fisher, Nora Groce, Batsirai Majuru, Michael M Mokoena, Murembiwa S Mukhola, Nguyen Viet Hung, Pham Duc Phuc, Ashley Rhoderick Williams, Wolf-Peter Schmidt and Paul R Hunter. J Global Health 2018 8(1) doi: 10.7189/jogh.08.010406.

Mike went on to become a Research Associate at the Water Institute and subsequently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, affiliated with the Water Institute, at UNC.

PhD adviser (spring 2017)

Ryan Cronk, UNC. Ryan won the Graduate Student Mentoring Award in 2014 for his work with Garrison Gordon. He was awarded a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) Institutional Research Training Grants, supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) for 2015–16 and 2016-17 (NIEHS T32 Training Grant, NIH T32ES007018, co-PIs: Herring and Fry). Ryan’s doctoral dissertation included the following five manuscripts:

Identifying Opportunities to Improve Piped Water Continuity and Water System Monitoring in Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama: evidence from bayesian networks and regression analysis. Cronk R and Bartram J. J Cleaner Production Vol 196, 20 September 2018, pp1–10.

Environmental Conditions in Health Care Facilities in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: coverage and inequalities. Cronk R and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2018 Apr 1; 221(3): 409–422.

Factors influencing water system functionality in Nigeria and Tanzania: a regression and Bayesian network analysis. Ryan Cronk and Jamie Bartram. Environ Sci Technol, 2017, 51 (19), pp 11336–11345.

DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b03287.

Ryan’s PhD studies were also associated with the publication of:

Global assessment of exposure to fecal-contamination through drinking-water based on a systematic review. Robert Bain, Ryan Cronk, Rifat Hossain, Sophie Bonjour, Kyle Onda, Jim Wright, Hong Yang, Slaymaker T, Hunter P, Annette

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Pruess Ustun, and Jamie Bartram. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 19(8) pp917−927, 2014.

Fecal Contamination of Drinking-water in Low- and Middle-income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Bain R, Cronk R, Wright J, Yang H, Slaymaker T and Bartram J. (2014). PLoS Med 11(5): e1001644. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001644

Association of Supply Type with Fecal Contamination of Source Water and Household Stored Drinking-water in Developing Countries: a bivariate meta-analysis. Katherine Shields, Rob Bain, Ryan Cronk, Jim Wright and Jamie Bartram. Environ Health Perspect. 123 (12) 1222–1231, Dec 2015.

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Fecal Contamination and Inadequate Treatment of Packaged Drinking Water. Williams A, Bain R, Fisher M, Cronk R, Kelly E and Bartram J. PLoS ONE 2015.

Rethinking Sustainability, Scalability and Enabling Environment: A framework for their implementation in drinking water supply. Urooj Amjad, Edema Ojomo, Kristen Downs, Ryan Cronk and Jamie Bartram. Water (2015), 7, 1497–1514.

Understanding Handpump Sustainability: Determinants of Rural Water Source Functionality in the Greater Afram Plains Region of Ghana. Michael B. Fisher; Katherine Shields; Terence U Chan; Elizabeth Christenson; Ryan D. Cronk; Hannah Leker; Destina Samani; Patrick Apoya; Alexandra Lutz; Jamie Bartram. Water Resources Research Volume 51, Issue 10 October 2015, pp 8431–8449.

Seasonal variation of fecal contamination in drinking water sources in developing countries: a systematic review. Caroline Kostyla, Rob Bain, Ryan Cronk, and Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment 514 (2015) pp 333–343.

Assessing Progress towards Public Health, Human Rights and International Development Goals Using Frontier Analysis. Luh J, Cronk R and Bartram J. (2016). PLoS ONE 11(1) e0147663.

Evaluating Mobile Survey Tools (MSTs) for field-level monitoring and data collection: development of a novel evaluation framework, and application to MSTs for rural water and sanitation monitoring. Michael B. Fisher, Ben H. Mann, Ryan D. Cronk, Katherine F. Shields, Tori L. Klug, Rohit Ramaswamy. Int J Environ Research Public Health, 13(9), 840;

Water system hardware and management rehabilitation qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Tori Klug, Kate Shields, Ryan Cronk, Emma Kelly, Nikki Behnke, Kristen Lee and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438-4639(16)30388-1.

Resource mobilization for community-managed rural water systems: evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Nikki L. Behnke, Tori Klug, Ryan Cronk, Katherine F. Shields, Kristen Lee, Emma R. Kelly, Greg Allgood, and Jamie Bartram. J Cleaner Production 156 (2017) 437–444.

A systematic review of waterborne infections from nontuberculous mycobacteria in health care facility water systems. Trudy Li, Lydia S. Abebe, Ryan Cronk, Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438–4639(16)30574-0

Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to Water and Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human Rights Accountability. Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan Cronk, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram and Catarina de

Albuquerque in Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy, Conca K and Weinthal E, 2017. Oxford University Press.

Ryan went on to become a post-doctoral fellow at UNC, with the Water Institute, on graduation (see above).

Post-doctoral Edema Ojomo, UNC. Edema was appointed co-chair of the Junior Global

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researcher adviser (2016−2017)

Advisory Panel of the DfID REACH Programme for 2016–2018 and produced the following publications from her post-doctoral work:

National drinking water targets - trends and factors associated with target setting. Luh J Ojomo E, Evans B and Bartram J (2017). Water Policy, 19 (5) 851-866; DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.108.doi:10.2166/wp.2017.10

Expert Assessment of the Resilience of Drinking Water and Sanitation Systems to Climate-related Hazards. Luh J, Royster S, Sebastian D, Ojomo E and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 592 (2017) 334–344.

Edema went on to work as a Senior Program Associate at the Safe Water Network headquarters in New York and in 2018 became as Associate at McKinsey & Company.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser

(2016−2017)

Jonny Crocker, UNC. Jonny worked on a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation-funded post-doctoral fellowship, producing the following publications from his post-doctoral work:

Interpreting the Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS) Findings on Sanitation, Hygiene, and Diarrhea. Crocker J, Bartram J (2016) PLoS Med 13(5): e1002011.

Jonny went on to become a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Washington, Seattle.

MSPH academic and thesis adviser

(spring 2017)

Katherine (Katie) Connolly, UNC. Katie won a UNC Weiss Urban liveability fellowship; and was the 2016 recipient of the Holly A. Cornell Scholarship from AWWA. Thesis: Are Water Sector Professionals Worried About Climate Change? Risk Perceptions of Water and Wastewater Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa. Katie won the Environmental Sciences and Engineering Department Achievement Award for 2017 which “recognizes an outstanding Master’s graduate based on academic excellence as evidenced by: outstanding performance in formal courses; quality and depth of the Master's report; creativity and scientific maturity; service to the department, community or state and professional promise.”

Katie’s master’s studies were associated with the publication of:

Perceptions of Risks Posed by Climate Change among Water Sector Professionals in Sub-Saharan Africa: insights from the 2016 African Water Association Congress. Fuente D, Connolly K, Mwaura M and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health Volume 221, Issue 5, June 2018, pp 838–846. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.04.007.

Katie secured an ORISE fellowship with the USEPA Office of Water in Washington DC on graduation.

Undergraduate honors committee

member (spring 2017)

Abhishek Raman Komandur, UNC (adviser: MacDonald-Gibson). Honors thesis: The Association between Water Lead Levels and Blood Lead Levels: A Systematic Review.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser

(Jan 2016 to August 2017)

Lydia Abebe. Co-mentor (with Prof Mark Sobsey) in Carolina Postdoctoral Program for Faculty Diversity. As a post-doc, Lydia led a project on chitosan in drinking-water treatment and served as Focus Area Lead Scientist on Environmental Health and Health Systems for the Water Institute, publishing:

A systematic review of nosocomial waterborne infection in neonates and mothers.

Michelle Moffa, Wilson Guo, Trudy Li, Ryan Cronk, Lydia Abebe, Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 2017 Nov: 220(8): 1199-1206. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.07.011.

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A systematic review of waterborne infections from nontuberculous mycobacteria in health care facility water systems. Trudy Li, Lydia S. Abebe, Ryan Cronk, Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438–4639(16)30574-0

Lydia went on to become an AAAS Science and Technology Fellow at the USAID Bureau for Global Health.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser

(2011−2016)

Georgia Kayser, UNC. Georgia was one of a team of three post docs employed on the Fogarty International Center-funded ‘Water Wisdom’ grant in

academic year 2011−12. This work led to the publication of:

Evidence Based Decision-making and Water Providers in Malawi Ecuador and Brazil. Amjad U; Dalcanale F, Kayser G, Bentley M and Bartram J. Water Policy 20 (2018) 530–545. DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.184

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in rural health care facilities: a cross-sectional study in Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia. Guo, Amy; Bowling, James; Bartram, Jamie; Kayser, Georgia. Am J Trop Med Hyg Volume 97, Issue 4, Oct 2017, p. 1033 – 1042; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.17-0208

Implementing an Evolving Human Right through Water and Sanitation Policy. Meier B; Kayser G; Amjad U and Bartram J. Water Policy 15 (2013) 116–133.

Workshop Synthesis Report: Human Rights-based Indicators Regarding Non-Discrimination and Equity in the Access to Water and Sanitation. (Practical Paper).

Amjad, U.Q., Kayser, G., Meier, B.M. 2013. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development Vol. 4 No. 1 pp.182−187.

Translating the Human Right to Water and Sanitation into Public Policy Reform. Benjamin Mason Meier, Georgia Lyn Kayser, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, Urooj Quezon Amjad, Fernanda Dalcanale and Jamie Bartram. Sci and Eng Ethics 120–136 (2014).

Examining the Practice of Developing Human Rights Indicators to Facilitate Accountability for the Human Right to Water and Sanitation. Benjamin Mason Meier; Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum; Georgia Lyn Kayser; Urooj Quezon Amjad; Jamie Bartram. Journal of Human Rights Practice 2014 6: 159−181.

Drinking Water Quality Governance: A Comparative Case Study of Brazil, Ecuador, and Malawi. Kayser, G.L., Amjad, U.Q., Dalcanale, F., Bartram, J. and Bentley, P. Env Sci and Policy 48 (2015)186–195.

On successful completion of Water Wisdom Georgia continued to work with the Water Institute, providing ‘Monitoring Evaluation and Learning’ support to the Conrad N Hilton Foundation portfolio of WaSH projects and grantees. During this period she spent one semester as an Honorary Fellow in Public Health and Policy at the University of Liverpool, UK. Her work led to the publication of:

Domestic Water Service Delivery Indicators and Frameworks for Monitoring, Evaluation, Policy and Planning: A Review. Kayser GL, Moriarty P, Fonseca C and Bartram J. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2013; 10(10):4812−4835.

Country Clustering Applied to the Water and Sanitation Sector: A New Tool With Potential Applications in Research and Policy. Kyle Onda, Jonny Crocker, Georgia Lyn Kayser and Jamie Bartram. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 217 (2014) 379−385.

Assessing the Microbial Quality of Improved Drinking Water Sources: Results from the Dominican Republic. Baum, R., Kayser, G.L., Stauber, C., Sobsey, M. 2014 American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 90(1) 121−123.

International Policy (Chapter 43). Bartram J, Kayser G, Gordon B and Dodds F.

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pp433–446 in Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. 2015. Routledge, London.

Assessing the Costs and Benefits of Water Safety Plans. Loret JF, Blaudin de The C; Martin Alonso J, Puigdomenec Serra C, Kayser G and Bartram J. Poster presented at IWA Global Congress, Brisbane, October 2016. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Water quality, compliance and health outcomes among utilities implementing Water Safety Plans in France and Spain. Karen E Setty, Georgia L Kayser, Michael Bowling, Jerome Enault, Jean-Francois Loret, Claudia Puigdomenech Serra, Jordi Martin Alonso, Arnau Pla Mateu and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 2017 220 (2017) 513–530.

Georgia went on to a Project Scientist position at the University of California at San Diego on completion of her post-doc.

MS research and academic adviser

(summer 2016)

Victoria (Tori) Klug, UNC. Tori won the 2015 AWWA Larson Aquatic Support, Master’s scholarship. Thesis: Water System Breakdown Typologies and Rehabilitation Pathways in sub-Saharan Africa. The associated work involved a World Vision-funded project in Liberia, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda and supervision of three undergraduate researchers in the field (Nikki Behnke, Emma Kelly and Kristen Lee) and led to the publication of:

Tori designed and then led a three country (Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia) qualitative study on the processes influencing sustainability of community-managed water systems. This involved training and coordinating a team of graduate and undergraduate students and a staff researcher; and directing the conduct of around 320 interviews and focus group discussions across 18 different study communities

Emma Kelly and Leah Everist conducted field work in Ghana, Kristen Lee and Nikki Behnke in Zambia, and Julian Oliver was with me in Kenya. Emma, Kristen, and Nikki all continued working with my team through the most recent school year on data analysis and report and manuscript preparation. All but Julian were undergraduates.

A categorization of water system breakdowns: evidence from Liberia, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda. Ryan Cronk, Tori Klug; Katherine F Shields; Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 619–620, 1 April 2018, pp 1126–1132.

Seasonality, Water Use and Community Management of Water Systems in Rural Settings: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly, Katherine F. Shields, Ryan Cronk, Kristen Lee, Nikki Behnke, Tori Klug, Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 628–629, 1 July 2018, pp715–721. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.045

The role of social capital and sense of ownership in rural community-managed water systems: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly, Kristen Lee, Katherine F Shields, Ryan Cronk, Nikki Behnke, Tori Klug, Jamie Bartram. Journal of Rural Studies 2017 (56) 156–166.

Water system hardware and management rehabilitation qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Tori Klug, Kate Shields, Ryan Cronk, Emma Kelly, Nikki Behnke, Kristen Lee and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438-4639(16)30388-1. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.02.009.

Resource mobilization for community-managed rural water systems: evidence

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from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Nikki L. Behnke, Tori Klug, Ryan Cronk, Katherine F. Shields, Kristen Lee, Emma R. Kelly, Greg Allgood, and Jamie Bartram. J Cleaner Production 156 (2017) 437–444.

During her master’s studies Tori also collaborated in the publication of:

Evaluating Mobile Survey Tools (MSTs) for field-level monitoring and data collection: development of a novel evaluation framework, and application to MSTs for rural water and sanitation monitoring. Michael B. Fisher, Ben H. Mann, Ryan D. Cronk, Katherine F. Shields, Tori L. Klug, Rohit Ramaswamy. Int J Environ Research Public Health, 13(9), 840; doi 10.3390/ijerph13090840; 2016.

Tori won the 2016 Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering Bunker Award, given to the student with an engineering background who shows the most outstanding scholarship and professional promise.

Tori went on to work for EKI, a small environmental engineering consulting firm, on the implementation of California's Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. In 2018 she joined the Pasadena office of Stantec to work on potable reuse projects in Southern California

Undergraduate Research Fellow

Faculty Adviser (Summer 2016)

Samara Green, UNC.

Undergraduate Research Fellow

Faculty Adviser (Summer 2016)

Emma Kelly, UNC. Emma’s collaboration with the Water Institute led to the publication of:

The role of social capital and sense of ownership in rural community-managed water systems: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly, Kristen Lee, Katherine F Shields, Ryan Cronk, Nikki Behnke, Tori Klug, Jamie Bartram. Journal of Rural Studies 2017 (56) 156–166.

Seasonality, Water Use and Community Management of Water Systems in Rural Settings: qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Emma Kelly, Katherine F. Shields, Ryan Cronk, Kristen Lee, Nikki Behnke, Tori Klug, Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment Vols 628–629, 1 July 2018, pp715–721. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.045

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Fecal Contamination and Inadequate Treatment of Packaged Drinking Water. Williams A, Bain R, Fisher M, Cronk R, Kelly E and Bartram J. PLoS ONE 2015.

Water system hardware and management rehabilitation qualitative evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Tori Klug, Kate Shields, Ryan Cronk, Emma Kelly, Nikki Behnke, Kristen Lee and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health, 2017, S1438-4639(16)30388-1. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.02.009.

Resource mobilization for community-managed rural water systems: evidence from Ghana, Kenya, and Zambia. Nikki L. Behnke, Tori Klug, Ryan Cronk, Katherine F. Shields, Kristen Lee, Emma R. Kelly, Greg Allgood, and Jamie Bartram. J Cleaner Production 156 (2017) 437–444.

Emma went on to Master’s studies at UNC with me as her adviser (see above).

MSPH academic and research

adviser (spring 2016)

Osborn Kwena, UNC. Osborn received a Rotary Peace Fellowship for the duration of his studies. Thesis: Impact of District-level Managerial Training of Kenyan Government Officials on the Scale-up of Community-led Total Sanitation.

Osborn continued to work with us as a graduate researcher on graduation.

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MSPH academic and thesis adviser

(spring 2016)

Rachel Baum, UNC. Rachel won an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (in 2013; used for 2014–2017); a UNC Weiss Urban Liveability Fellowship (awarded in 2013); and won but declined a UNC Master’s Merit Assistantship (awarded in 2013, but cannot be taken in addition to the Weiss Fellowship). Thesis: Bridges, Barriers and Potential Benefits of Implementing Water Safety Plans in North Carolina. Rachel’s Master’s thesis comprised three published papers:

A Systematic Literature Review of the Enabling Environment Elements to Promote Implementation of Water Safety Plans in High-Income Countries. Baum R and Bartram J. Journal of Water and Health. 2018 Feb 1; 16(1): 14–24.

An Examination of the Potential Added Value of Water Safety Plans to the United States National Drinking Water Legislation. Rachel Baum, Urooj Amjad, Jeanne Luh and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 677–685.

Water Safety Plans: Bridges and Barriers to Implementation in North Carolina. Amjad UQ, Luh J, Baum R and Bartram J. J Water Health 14 (5) 816-

826; DOI: 10.2166/wh.2016.011.

During her Master’s studies Rachel also collaborated with me in the publication of:

Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). 2015. Pp xviii + 732. Routledge, London.

Introduction (Chapter 1). Bartram J and Baum R pp 1–12 in Bartram J with Baum R, Coclanis P, Gute D, Kay D, McFadyen S, Pond K, Robertson W and Rouse M.et al (Eds). Routledge Handbook of Water and Health. 2015. Routledge, London.

The Flint water crisis confirms that US drinking water needs improved risk management. Baum, Rachel; Bartram, Jamie; Hrudey, Steve. Environ. Sci. Technol., 2016, 50 (11), pp 5436–5437.

Rachel went on to doctoral studies at UNC on graduation (adviser Characklis).

MS committee member (spring

2016)

Nur Aisyah Nasution, UNC (advisor: Whittington). Thesis: The dynamics of Piped-water and Sewer Development in Jakarta, Indonesia 1945-2015: A case Study using Multilevel Perspective

PhD adviser (spring 2016)

Edema Ojomo, UNC. Edema won a five-year fellowship in the Royster Society of Fellows from the Graduate School at UNC. Dissertation: Influence of the Enabling Environment on Drinking-water Programs: Qualitative and Quantitative Analyses. Her PhD dissertation comprised three papers:

Sustainability and Scale-up of Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage Practices: enablers and barriers to effective implementation. Edema Ojomo, Mark Elliot, Michael Forson and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015) 704–713.

During her doctoral studies Edema also published:

Rethinking Sustainability, Scalability and Enabling Environment: A framework for their implementation in drinking water supply. Urooj Amjad, Edema Ojomo, Kristen Downs, Ryan Cronk and Jamie Bartram. Water (2015), 7, 1497–1514.

Vulnerability assessment for loss of access to drinking water due to extreme weather events. Jeanne Luh, Elizabeth C. Christenson, Aizhan Toregozhina, David A. Holcomb, Tucker Witsil, Laura R. Hamrick, Edema Ojomo, and Jamie Bartram. Climatic Change 133(4) 665–679, 2015.

Monitoring Drinking-water Sanitation and Hygiene in non-Household Settings:

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Priorities for Policy and Practice. Ryan Cronk, Tom Slaymaker and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 694–703.

Edema went on to become a post-doctoral scholar at UNC with me as her adviser on graduation (see above).

PhD advisor, (spring 2016)

Jonathan Crocker, UNC. Jonny won a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) Institutional Research Training Grants (Parent T32), supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) for 2012−13 and 2013−14 (NIEHS T32 Training Grant, NIH T32ES007018, co-PIs: Herring and Fry). His work was recognised in 2017 with the Greenberg Award for Excellence in Doctoral Research. Jonny’s doctoral dissertation: Evaluating the Process, Costs and Outcomes of Engaging Natural Leaders in Community-led Total Sanitation included three papers:

The true costs of participatory sanitation: evidence from community-led total sanitation studies in Ghana and Ethiopia. Crocker J, Saywell D, Shields K, Kolsky P and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 601–602 (2017) 1075–1083.

Building capacity for water, sanitation, and hygiene programming: training evaluation theory applied to CLTS management training in Kenya. Crocker J, Shields KF, Venkataramanan V, Saywell D and Bartram J. Social Science &

Medicine Volume 166, October 2016, pp 66–76.Z

Impact evaluation of training natural leaders during a community-led total sanitation intervention: a cluster-randomized field trial in Ghana. Crocker, Jonny; Abodoo, Elvis; Asamani, Daniel; Domapielle, William; Gyapong, Benedict; Bartram, Jamie. Environ. Sci. Technol., 2016, 50 (16), pp 8867–8875.

Associated with his doctoral research Jonny also published:

Community-led Total Sanitation: a mixed-methods systematic review of evidence

and its quality. Venkataramanan V, Crocker J, Karon AJ and Bartram J. Environ Health Perspect 126(2), February 2018; DOI:10.1289/EHP1965.

Teachers and sanitation promotion: an assessment of community-led total sanitation in Ethiopia. Crocker Jonathan; Abiyot Geremew, BS; Fisseha Atalie, MA; Messele Yetie, MA; Jamie Bartram. Accepted by Environ Sci Technol 23 May 2016.

Country Clustering Applied to the Water and Sanitation Sector: A New Tool with Potential Applications in Research and Policy. Kyle Onda, Jonny Crocker, Georgia Lyn Kayser and Jamie Bartram. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 217 (2014) 379−385.

Sustainability of community-led total sanitation outcomes: Evidence from Ethiopia and Ghana. Crocker J, Saywell D and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2017 May; 220(3): 551–557.

Jonny received the 2017 Greenberg Award for Excellence in Doctoral Research in recognition of his “outstanding dissertation work and potential to contribute to finding and implementing public health solutions”. Jonny became a post-doctoral fellow at the Water Institute on graduation (see above).

BSPH Honors thesis committee member, spring 2015 (spring

2016)

Sharon Jiang, UNC. Sharon completed her senior honors thesis “Comparison of Antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus among Industrial Hog Operation Households and Community Referent Households in North Carolina” (adviser Stewart) in her junior year.

PhD external examiner, August

Ricard Gine Garriga, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (advisor: Agustí Pérez Foguet). Dissertation: Monitoring water, sanitation and hygiene services:

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2015 Developing tools and methods to measure sustainable access and practice at the local level.

MS/PhD Committee member, (fall 2015)

Maura Allaire, UNC (adviser: Whittington). Dissertation: Adapting to Extreme

Events: Household Response to Floods in Urban Areas.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser,

Jan 2012 to 2015

Jeanne Luh, UNC. Jeanne’s post-doctoral research led to the following publications:

National drinking water targets - trends and factors associated with target setting. Luh J Ojomo E, Evans B and Bartram J (2017). Water Policy, 19 (5) 851-866; DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.108.doi:10.2166/wp.2017.10

Developing an Index to Quantify Progress in the Non-Discrimination and Equity Component of the Human Right to Water. Jeanne Luh, Rachel Baum, and Jamie

Bartram. Int J Hyg and Environ Health 2013 Jan 16. pii: S1438−4639(12)00143–5.

Sanitation: A Global Estimate of Sewerage Connections without Treatment and the Resulting Impact on MDG Progress Rachel Baum, Jeanne Luh, and Jamie Bartram. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47, 1994−2000.

Assessing the impact of climate change related hazards on the vulnerability of North Carolina drinking water systems Jeanne Luh, Elizabeth C. Christenson, David A. Holcomb, Laura R. Hamrick, and Jamie Bartram. Abstract accepted for oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Could Your Utility Be Using a Better Risk Management Strategy to Improve Water Quality? Why Water Utilities Would Use Water Safety Plans in North Carolina. Urooj Amjad*, Rachel Baum, Jeanne Luh, and Jamie Bartram. Abstract accepted for oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Vulnerability assessment for loss of access to drinking water due to extreme weather events. Jeanne Luh, Elizabeth C. Christenson, Aizhan Toregozhina, David A. Holcomb, Tucker Witsil, Laura R. Hamrick, Edema Ojomo, and Jamie Bartram. Climatic Change 133(4) 665–679, 2015.

An Examination of the Potential Added Value of Water Safety Plans to the United States National Drinking Water Legislation. Rachel Baum, Urooj Amjad, Jeanne Luh and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 677–685.

Drinking water and sanitation: progress in 73 countries towards in relation to socioeconomic indicators. Jeanne Luh, and Jamie Bartram. Bull World Health Organ 2016; 94 111–121A.

Assessing Progress towards Public Health, Human Rights and International Development Goals Using Frontier Analysis. Luh J, Cronk R and Bartram J. (2016). PLoS ONE 11(1) e0147663.

Water Safety Plans: Bridges and Barriers to Implementation in North Carolina. Amjad UQ, Luh J, Baum R and Bartram J. J Water Health 14 (5) 816–

826; DOI: 10.2166/wh.2016.011.

Expert Assessment of the Resilience of Drinking Water and Sanitation Systems to Climate-related Hazards. Luh J, Royster S, Sebastian D, Ojomo E and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 592 (2017) 334–344.

Challenges to Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals: Water Treatment.

Jeanne Luh and Jamie Bartram pp597—622 in Chemistry and Water: The Science behind Sustaining the World's Most Crucial Resource; Ahuja S (Ed) pp xvii + 649, 2017. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to Water and

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Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human Rights Accountability. Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan Cronk, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram and Catarina

de Albuquerque in Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy, Conca K and Weinthal E, 2017. Oxford University Press.

Jeanne was recruited into a position of ‘Focus Area Lead Scientist’ in the Water Institute in 2015.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser,

2013−15.

Jianyong Wu, UNC. Jianyong worked on innovations towards rapid detection of E. coli. Leading to the publication of:

Evaluation of Two Enzymatic Substrates 5-Bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl β-D-glucuronide and Resorufin β-D-glucuronide for Rapid Detection of E. coli in Water. Jianyong Wu, Jill R. Stewart, Mark D. Sobsey, Chris Cormency, Jamie K. Bartram. Current Microbiology (2018) https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-018-1454-8.

He moved on to a position with USEPA in RTP.

MSPH thesis committee member,

(summer 2015)

Billy Gerhard, UNC. Thesis: Drinking-water Quality on San Cristobal Island, Galapagos (adviser: Stewart).

Undergraduate Research Adviser

(spring 2015)

Garrison Gordon, UNC. Garrison was a Morehead-Cain Scholar at UNC. I served as Garrison’s undergraduate research adviser in the fall 2013 and spring 2014 semesters for work on monitoring and evaluation of social enterprises active in WaSH.

DrPH Dissertation Committee member,

(spring 2015).

Gretchen Cowman, UNC. Dissertation: Cholera Prevention and Control in Kenya (Health Policy and Management, adviser Harsha Thirumurthy). Gretchen’s doctoral studies were associated with the publication of:

Factors Associated with Cholera in Kenya, 2008-2013. Gretchen Cowman, Shikanga O-tipo, Ian Njeru, Thomas Achia, Jackson Kioko, Harsha Thirumurthy, Jamie Bartram. Pan-African Medical Journal. 2017;28:101. doi:10.11604/pamj.2017.28.101.12806.

BSPH Undergraduate

research adviser (spring 2015)

Jordan Deuink (HPM) (Research on Climate Change adaptation). I served as Jordan’s undergraduate research adviser during the fall 2012 and 2013 semesters. Jordan was a member of a team that received an honourable mention in the USEPA P3 student design competition for sustainability.

Master’s thesis committee member,

(spring 2015)

Julian Oliver, UNC. Thesis: Predictors of E. coli contamination at rural water points in Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Uganda and Zambia (adviser J MacDonald Gibson).

Post-doctoral researcher adviser

August 2011 to August 2014

Urooj Amjad, UNC. Urooj was one of a team of three post docs employed on the Fogarty International Center-funded ‘Water Wisdom’ grant in academic year 2011–12. This work led to the publication of:

Evidence Based Decision-making and Water Providers in Malawi Ecuador and Brazil. Amjad U; Dalcanale F, Kayser G, Bentley M and Bartram J. Water Policy 20 (2018) 530–545. DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.184

Implementing an Evolving Human Right through Water and Sanitation Policy. Meier B; Kayser G; Amjad U and Bartram J. Water Policy 15 (2013) 116–133.

Workshop Synthesis Report: Human Rights-based Indicators Regarding Non-

Discrimination and Equity in the Access to Water and Sanitation Amjad, U.Q., Kayser, G., Meier, B.M. 2013. Practical Paper. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development Vol. 4 No. 1 pp.182–187.

Could Your Utility Be Using a Better Risk Management Strategy to Improve

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Water Quality? Why Water Utilities Would Use Water Safety Plans in North Carolina. Urooj Amjad, Rachel Baum, Jeanne Luh, and Jamie Bartram. Abstract accepted for oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Drinking Water Quality Governance: A Comparative Case Study of Brazil, Ecuador, and Malawi. Kayser, G.L., Amjad, U.Q., Dalcanale, F., Bartram, J. and Bentley, P. Env Sci and Policy 48 (2015)186–195.

On successful completion of Water Wisdom, Urooj continued as a post-doctoral researcher at the Water Institute and Research Fellow of the UNC Global Research Institute (2012–13, renewed 2013–14). Research outputs of that work included:

Translating the Human Right to Water and Sanitation into Public Policy Reform. Benjamin Mason Meier, Georgia Lyn Kayser, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, Urooj Quezon Amjad, Fernanda Dalcanale and Jamie Bartram. Sci and Eng Ethics 120–136 (2014).

Examining the Practice of Developing Human Rights Indicators to Facilitate Accountability for the Human Right to Water and Sanitation. Benjamin Mason Meier; Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum; Georgia Lyn Kayser; Urooj Quezon Amjad; Jamie Bartram. Journal of Human Rights Practice 2014 6: 159−181.Rethinking Sustainability, Scalability and Enabling Environment: A framework for their implementation in drinking water supply. Urooj Amjad, Edema Ojomo, Kristen Downs, Ryan Cronk and Jamie Bartram. Water (2015), 7, 1497–1514.

Climate Change Preparedness: A Knowledge Attitudes and Practices Study in Southern Nigeria. Ojomo E, Elliott M; Amjad, U and Bartram J. Environments 2015, 2, 435–448.

An Examination of the Potential Added Value of Water Safety Plans to the United States National Drinking Water Legislation. Rachel Baum, Urooj Amjad, Jeanne Luh and Bartram J. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 677–685.

Water Safety Plans: Bridges and Barriers to Implementation in North Carolina. Amjad UQ, Luh J, Baum R and Bartram J. J Water Health 14 (5) 816-

826; DOI: 10.2166/wh.2016.011.

Dr Amjad left the Water Institute in 2014 for family reasons and later joined Queens College (CUNY) as an undergraduate instructor/lecturer.

BSPH honors thesis adviser (spring

2014)

Stefanie Schwemlein, UNC. Thesis: Systematic Review and Application of Indicator Selection Methods for Monitoring School Water Sanitation and Hygiene. Stefanie was a Robertson Scholar and a UNC 2013 Phillips Ambassador. She did a University Scholars exchange with National University of Singapore in fall 2013 at the same time as conducting research for her honors thesis. Stefanie was a member of a team that received an honourable mention in the USEPA P3 student design competition for sustainability. Her undergraduate research led to the publication of:

Indicators for monitoring water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools: A systematic review of indicator selection methods. Schwemlein S, Cronk R and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 2016, 13, 333.

Stefanie moved to the San Francisco Bay Area on graduation where she worked with tech startups, becoming “Lead Product Designer” at the company StreamLoan.

MSPH committee member (spring

2014)

Julia Naman, UNC. Thesis: Disparities in water and sewer services in North Carolina: An analysis of the decision-making process (adviser Jacqueline MacDonald Gibson).

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MSPH academic and thesis adviser

(spring 2014)

Alycia Overbo, UNC. Thesis: Health and Household Access to Water and Sanitation: A Global Analysis and Systematic Literature Review. Alycia received the Class of 2013 Annual Scholarship award for the Environmental Sciences and Engineering Department; and was one of three UNC students nominated for DACOR Bacon Foundation Fellowship in 2013, a fellowship awarded to students with interests in international development and public service. While she did not receive the Fellowship, Alycia was nominated based on merit and interviewed for it. Her Master’s studies led to the publication of:

Does Global Progress on Sanitation Really Lag behind Water? An Analysis of Global Progress on Community- and Household-level Access to Safe Water and Sanitation. Cumming O, Elliott M, Overbo A, Bartram J, 2014. PLoS ONE 9(12): e114699.

On-plot Drinking Water Supplies and Health: A Systematic Review. Alycia Overbo, Ashley R Williams; Barbara Evans, Paul Hunter and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 219, issues 4-5 (2016), 317–330.

Public health and social benefits of at-house water supplies. Final Report. Evans, B.; Bartram, J.; Hunter, P.; Williams, A.R.; Geere, J.A.; Majuru, B.; Bates, L.; Fisher, M.; Overbo, A.; Schmidt, W.P. University of Leeds, Leeds, UK (2013) (vi + 53 pages).

Alycia went on to work as an independent consultant, including working extensively with us at the Water Institute at UNC; and subsequently to PhD studies at the University of Minnesota.

Double Master’s MSPH and MCRP.

Co-advisor (academic and

thesis adviser for MSPH) (spring

2014)

Kyle Onda, UNC. Thesis: Intermittent versus Continuous Water Supply: What Benefits do Households Actually Receive? Evidence from Two Cities in India. Kyle won the Environmental Sciences and Engineering Department Achievement Award for 2014 which “recognizes an outstanding Master’s graduate based on academic excellence as evidenced by: outstanding performance in formal courses; quality and depth of the Master's report; creativity and scientific maturity; service to the department, community or state and professional promise.” Kyle’s research led to the publication of:

Global Access to Safe Water: Accounting for Water Quality and the Resulting Impact on MDG Progress. Kyle Onda, Joe LoBuglio and Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9(3), 880–894.

Global assessment of exposure to fecal-contamination through drinking-water based on a systematic review. Robert Bain, Ryan Cronk, Rifat Hossain, Sophie Bonjour, Kyle Onda, Jim Wright, Hong Yang, Slaymaker T, Hunter P, Annette Pruess Ustun, and Jamie Bartram. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 19(8) pp917–927, 2014.

Country Clustering Applied to the Water and Sanitation Sector: A New Tool With Potential Applications in Research and Policy. Kyle Onda, Jonny Crocker, Georgia Lyn Kayser and Jamie Bartram. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 217 (2014) 379−385.

On graduation Kyle continued to PhD studies at UNC (Department of City and Regional Planning).

MS academic and thesis adviser (spring 2014)

Caroline Kostyla (now Foster), UNC. Thesis: Seasonality of drinking water contamination: a systematic literature review. Caroline’s Master’s research led to the publication of:

Seasonal variation of fecal contamination in drinking water sources in developing countries: a systematic review. Caroline Kostyla, Rob Bain, Ryan Cronk, and

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Jamie Bartram. Science of the Total Environment 514 (2015) pp 333–343.

Caroline went on to become the “Community Development Specialist” at Water Mission in Charleston SC.

PhD evaluator (spring 2013)

Andrea Perez, Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia. Our collaboration led to publication of:

Water Quality Laboratories in Colombia: a GIS-based study of urban and rural accessibility. Wright J, Liu J, Bain R, Perez A, Crocker J, Bartram J and Gundry S. Science of the Total Environment 2013 485 643–652.

Undergraduate research adviser

(spring 2013)

Elizabeth Christenson. Elizabeth’s undergraduate research led to the publication of:

Exposure to climate related hazards: a global assessment of population exposure to cyclone, drought and flood. Elizabeth Christenson, Mark Elliott, Ovik Banerjee, Laura Hamrick, Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11(2), 2169−2192.

Assessing the impact of climate change related hazards on the vulnerability of North Carolina drinking water systems Jeanne Luh, Elizabeth C. Christenson, David A. Holcomb, Laura R. Hamrick, and Jamie Bartram. Abstract accepted for oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Elizabeth continued to collaborate with me over summer 2013, leading to the publication of:

Rural:urban Inequalities in post-2015 Targets and Indicators for Drinking Water (Scientific Commentary). Bain R, Wright J, Christenson E and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 490 (2014) 509–513.

Examining the Influence of Urban definition when assessing the Relative Safety of Drinking water in Nigeria. Christenson E, Bain R, Wright J, Aondoakaa S, Hossain R, and Bartram J. Science of the Total Environment 490 (2014) 301–312.

Elizabeth won the UNC Innovative GIS competition for our paper Examining influence of urban definition when assessing relative safety of drinking water in Nigeria; and the G. Herbert Stout Award for Innovative Student Papers to present the research at the NC GIS Conference Feb 22-24 2017. Elizabeth continued to Master’s studies (adviser: Serre) and doctoral studies (adviser Stewart) at UNC.

MSEE academic and thesis adviser

(spring 2013)

Ryan Cronk, UNC. Thesis: Drinking-water, Sanitation and Hygiene Beyond the Household: a Global Review and Case study from Ghana. Ryan was a member of a team that received an honourable mention in the USEPA P3 student design competition for sustainability. Ryan’s Master’s studies, including further work on the theme of non-household settings, led to the following publications:

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in Health Care Facilities: status in low and middle-income countries and way forward. Cronk R and Bartram J, 2015. (pp x + 38). World Health Organization, Geneva.

Lack of Toilets and Safe Water in Health-care Facilities (editorial). Jamie Bartram, Ryan Cronk, Maggie Montgomery, Bruce Gordon, Maria Neira, Edward Kelley and Yael Velleman. Bull World Health Organ. April 2015.

Monitoring Drinking-water Sanitation and Hygiene in non-Household Settings: Priorities for Policy and Practice. Ryan Cronk, Tom Slaymaker and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 218 (2015), pp. 694–703 DOI information:

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10.1016/j.ijheh.2015.03.003

Ryan won the Graduate Student Mentoring Award in 2013 for his work with Stefanie Schwemlein and Mimi Caddell. Ryan won the Environmental Sciences and Engineering Department Achievement Award for 2013 which “recognizes an outstanding Master’s graduate based on academic excellence as evidenced by: outstanding performance in formal courses; quality and depth of the Master's report; creativity and scientific maturity; service to the department, community or state and professional promise.” He also led a team that won an ‘honorable mention award’ from US EPA’s 2013 People, Prosperity and the Planet Program.

Ryan continued to work as a graduate researcher with the Water Institute after graduation, publishing:

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools in low socio-economic regions in Nicaragua: a cross-sectional survey. Tania Jordanova, Ryan Cronk, Wanda Obando, Octavio Zeledon Medina, Rinko Kinoshita and Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 6197–6217.

Indicators for monitoring water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools: A systematic review of indicator selection methods. Schwemlein S, Conk R and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 2016, 13, 333.

Ryan continued to PhD studies, with me as adviser (see above).

MSEE academic and thesis adviser

(spring 2013).

Ashley Williams (nee Rhoderick), UNC. Thesis: Examining the relationship between distance and water quantity: a systematic review and multi-country field study. This work was associated with the publication of:

On-plot Drinking Water Supplies and Health: A Systematic Review. Alycia Overbo, Ashley R Williams; Barbara Evans, Paul Hunter and Jamie Bartram. Int J Hyg Environ Health 219, issues 4-5 (2016), 317–330.

Public health and social benefits of at-house water supplies. Final Report. Evans, B.; Bartram, J.; Hunter, P.; Williams, A.R.; Geere, J.A.; Majuru, B.; Bates, L.; Fisher, M.; Overbo, A.; Schmidt, W.P. University of Leeds, Leeds, UK (2013) (vi + 53 pages).

Ashley continued to work as a graduate researcher with the Water Institute after graduation. This work led to the publication of:

Carrying water may be a major contributor to disability from musculoskeletal disorders in low income countries: a cross-sectional survey in South Africa, Ghana and Vietnam. Jo-Anne Geere, Jamie Bartram, Laura Bates, Leslie Danquah, Barbara Evans, Michael Fisher, Nora Groce, Batsirai Majuru, Michael M Mokoena, Murembiwa S Mukhola, Nguyen Viet Hung, Pham Duc Phuc, Ashley Rhoderick Williams, Wolf-Peter Schmidt and Paul R Hunter. J Global Health 2018 8(1) doi: 10.7189/jogh.08.010406.

Consumer Perceptions and Purchasing of Packaged Water Products: a health belief model analysis in Sierra Leone. Ashley R. Williams, Mohamed F. Jalloh;

Mohammad B. Jalloh; Paul Sengeh; and Jamie K. Bartram. Pan African Medical Journal. 2018; 30:262. doi:10.11604/pamj.2018.30.262.13676.

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Fecal Contamination and Inadequate Treatment of Packaged Drinking Water. Williams A, Bain R, Fisher M, Cronk R, Kelly E and Bartram J. PLoS ONE 2015.

Ashley went on to become a Senior Associate and later Environmental Health Project Manager at ICF-International, based at their office in RTP.

MSPH academic Alex Yerg, UNC. Thesis: Modelling and Forecasting Drinking-water and

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and thesis adviser (spring 2013).

Sanitation Access: A New Approach. Alex continued to a prestigious presidential management fellowship on graduation and then to work for FEMA as a lead data analyst.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser

2011–2013

Fernanda Dalcanale, UNC. Fernanda was one of a team of three post docs employed on the Fogarty International Center-funded ‘Water Wisdom’ grant in academic year 2011–12. This work led to the publication of:

Evidence Based Decision-making and Water Providers in Malawi Ecuador and Brazil. Amjad U; Dalcanale F, Kayser G, Bentley M and Bartram J. Water Policy 20 (2018) 530–545. DOI: 10.2166/wp.2017.184

Translating the Human Right to Water and Sanitation into Public Policy Reform. Benjamin Mason Meier, Georgia Lyn Kayser, Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, Urooj Quezon Amjad, Fernanda Dalcanale and Jamie Bartram. Sci and Eng Ethics 120–136 (2014).

Drinking Water Quality Governance: A Comparative Case Study of Brazil, Ecuador, and Malawi. Kayser, G.L., Amjad, U.Q., Dalcanale, F., Bartram, J. and Bentley, P. Env Sci and Policy 48 (2015)186–195.

On successful completion of Water Wisdom Fernanda continued as a post-doctoral researcher, providing knowledge management inputs to several Water Institute projects. She went on to join the University of Sao Paolo, Brazil.

Post-doctoral researcher adviser,

2010 to Dec 2012

Mark Elliott, UNC. Mark’s research, during the five semesters I served as his adviser, lead to the publication of:

Technologies for Climate Change Adaptation – the Water Sector. Mark Elliott, Andrew Armstrong, Joseph Lobuglio and Jamie Bartram, 2011. pp128. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Risoe Centre. Roskilde, Denmark. http://tech-action.org/Guidebooks/TNA_Guidebook_AdaptationWater.pdf.

Benefits of Water Safety Plans: Microbiology, Compliance and Public Health Maria J. Gunnarsdottir, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson, Mark Elliott, Gudrun Sigmundsdottir and Jamie Bartram. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46, 7782−7789.

Getting Wet, Clean and Healthy: why households matter. Bartram J, Elliott M and Chuang P. Lancet (commentary) 10 July 2012 doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60903–9.

A Summary Catalogue of Microbial Drinking-water Tests Classified by Resource Requirements. Robert Bain, Jamie Bartram, Mark Elliott, Lanakila McMahan, Robert Matthews, Patty Chuang, Rosalind Tung and Stephen Gundry. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9, 1609–1625; doi:10.3390/ijerph9051609.

Water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions to improve health among people living with HIV/AIDS: a systematic review. Rachel Peletz, Thomas Mahin, Mark Elliott, Mamie S Harris, Ka Seen Chan, Myron S Cohen, Jamie K Bartram, Thomas F Clasen. AIDS (London, England). 10/2013; 27(16):2593−2601.

Mark was recruited into a tenure track position in the same subject area at the University of Alabama. He continued to collaborate with us as a Visiting Scholar while concluding publications from his time with the Water Institute. That collaboration led to the publication of:

Exposure to climate related hazards: a global assessment of population exposure to cyclone, drought and flood. Elizabeth Christenson, Mark Elliott, Ovik Banerjee, Laura Hamrick, Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11(2), 2169−2192.

Does Global Progress on Sanitation Really Lag behind Water? An Analysis of Global Progress on Community- and Household-level Access to Safe Water and Sanitation. Cumming O, Elliott M, Overbo A, Bartram J, 2014. PLoS ONE 9(12):

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e114699.

Undergraduate research adviser, fall

semester 2012 and fall semester 2013

Camille Morgan, UNC. Camille undertook research in fall 2012 as Sophomore on the ‘Sustainability Check’ project in Mozambique with UNC PhD student, Kristen Downs; and in fall 2013 on using large data sets (DHS) to assess WaSH access among disabled populations. Her work with us led to the publication of:

Water, sanitation, and hygiene in schools: status and implications of low coverage in Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda, and Zambia. Morgan C, Bowling JM, Bartram J and Kayser G. Int J Hyg Environ Health 220 (2017) 950-959.

MPH co-supervisor (spring 2012)

Lisa Pfadenhauer, School of Public Health, Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich, Germany. Thesis: Towards Effective Water Sanitation and Hygiene Interventions in the Philippines: A Mixed Method Approach (Eva Rehfuess: principal supervisor).

Master’s practicum preceptor (spring

2012)

Ryan Rowe, UNC. MPH (HBHE). Preceptor role was 2011. Ryan also worked with me throughout the two years of his studies as facilitator for the Network on Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage – services provided by the Water Institute at UNC to WHO and UNICEF. He was recruited by us to continue to manage the WHO HWTS network communications and develop related projects on graduation. Ryan went on to become Project Manager for International Programs at One Drop in Montreal.

PhD co-adviser and committee member

(spring 2012)

Maria Gunnarsdottir. Dissertation: Safe Drinking-water: experience with Water Safety Plans and Assessment of Risk Factors in Water Supply. University of Iceland. <aria’s dissertation included five journal publications of which I was a co-author on three:

Benefits of Water Safety Plans: Microbiology, Compliance and Public Health Maria J. Gunnarsdottir, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson, Mark Elliott, Gudrun Sigmundsdottir and Jamie Bartram. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46, 7782−7789.

Icelandic experience with water safety plans Maria J. Gunnarsdottir, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson and Jamie Bartram. Water Science and Technology 65.2, 2012 pp 277–288.

Natural background levels for chemicals in Icelandic aquifers. Maria J. Gunnarsdottir, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson, Gunnar St. Jonsson, Halldor Armannsson and Jamie Bartram. Hydrology Research 46.4 (2015) 647–660.

DrPH Committee Member (spring

2012)

Jennifer Platt, UNC (Health Policy and Management). Thesis: Assessing health system functions and impact on health through water and sanitation (adviser: Greene). This work lead to one publication co-authored by Jennifer and myself:

How Health Professionals Can Lever Health Gains from Improved Water, Sanitation and Hygiene. Jamie Bartram and Jennifer Platt, 2010 Vol 130 No 5 l Perspectives in Public Health. (Special Edition on Water and Sanitation) pp 215–221. DOI: 10.1177/1757913910379193.

Jennifer went on to become WaSH Sustainability Director at WaSH Advocates on graduation; in 2013 became the Senior Associate for WASH at Iris Group International; and in 2015 Director of Evaluation and Health Strategy at Thrive 4-7 LLC.

PhD Committee member (spring

2012)

Jennifer Shields (nee Gentry), UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Dissertation: Utilization of microbial source-tracking markers to inform targeted remediation and predict potential pathogens in the Cape Fear watershed (adviser: Stewart). During the period of her PhD studies Jennifer also

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collaborated with me on work leading to two publications:

Water and Health. J Shields and J Bartram. Section 4.1 in World Water Development Report 4, UNESCO on behalf of 24 UN agencies, 2012 (co-authors, on behalf of WHO and UNICEF).

Developing a Global Strategy for Water and Health Using the DPSEEA Framework. Shields J and Bartram J. Science of The Total Environment 09/2013 468-469C:306–314.

Jennifer was selected to attend the 2012 PhD student seminar (organized by Universite Paris-Sud 11, Universite de Lorraine, Suez Environment and ihph) at which she made one of three winning research presentations.

On completion of her studies Jennifer went on to become a post-doctoral researcher at NCSU; and later a microbiologist and then senior scientist with Procter & Gamble.

BSPH research and honors thesis

adviser (spring 2012)

Rachel Baum, UNC (Health Policy and Management). Honors thesis: Measuring the human right to water: Developing quantitative indicators through using existing data sets for the equity component of the human right to water. Rachel was awarded ‘highest honors’ and selected to receive the Excellence in Research Award for this work.

Rachel’s research as a junior undergraduate led to publication of:

Sanitation: A Global Estimate of Sewerage Connections without Treatment and the Resulting Impact on MDG Progress. Rachel Baum, Jeanne Luh, and Jamie Bartram. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013, 47, 1994−2000.

A follow-up article on the above, Statistics mask a global failure on access to clean toilets by Rachel was published in China Dialogue in May 2013.

Rachel’s honors thesis research led to publication of:

Developing an Index to Quantify Progress in the Non-Discrimination and Equity Component of the Human Right to Water. Jeanne Luh, Rachel Baum, and Jamie

Bartram. Int J Hyg and Environ Health 2013 Jan 16. pii: S1438-4639(12)00143-5. doi: 10.1016.

Rachel continued as a Water Institute intern for one year after graduation, working on a series of projects including fieldwork in the Dominican Republic and on Water Safety Plans in North Carolina, leading to publication of:

Assessing the Microbial Quality of Improved Drinking Water Sources: Results from the Dominican Republic. Baum, R., Kayser, G.L., Stauber, C., Sobsey, M. 2014. American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 90(1) 121–123.

Could Your Utility Be Using a Better Risk Management Strategy to Improve Water Quality? Why Water Utilities Would Use Water Safety Plans in North Carolina. Urooj Amjad*, Rachel Baum, Jeanne Luh, and Jamie Bartram. Abstract accepted for oral presentation at NC AWWA Annual Conference, Concord, NC November 10–13, 2013. Includes paper published in conference proceedings.

Rachel subsequently proceeded to Master’s study at UNC with me as her thesis and academic adviser (see above).

Undergraduate research adviser

2010 (spring 2012)

Tam Le, UNC. Tam worked on two projects during two semesters as my research advisee and undertook a summer trip to Peru. She co-authored two journal papers with my other advisees:

A modified method to determine the value for sanitation: Case Study on the Willingness to Pay for Sanitation in Peri-urban Households of Peru. Morris, E.L, Le, T.T. Waterlines Vol 31 No 4 (October 2012).

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Water and Sanitation in Schools: a systematic review of the health and hygiene outcomes. Hughes C; Le, TP and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9, 2772–2787; doi:10.3390/ijerph9082772.

Tam went on to Medical School on completion of her Bachelor’s degree.

MPH academic and thesis adviser (spring 2012)

Grant Ligon, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Synthesizing waterborne disease outbreak data to assess water systems failure effects on health: a systematic review. Grant’s Master’s work led to the publication of:

Literature Review of Associations Among Attributes of Reported Drinking Water Disease Outbreak Characteristics. Grant Ligon and Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2016, 13(6), 527; doi:10.3390/ijerph13060527.

Grant went on to work for RTI and then (2015) for the Public Health Engineering unit of the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

MSPH academic and thesis adviser

(spring 2012)

Hannah Spring, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Drinking water quality and health: stakeholder risk perception. Hannah was recruited by UC Berkeley on graduation to become Project Coordinator, IPA Kenya responsible to provide on-site coordination and support to water, sanitation, handwashing and behavior change communication for a multi-year WaSH study in Kenya funded by BMGF.

Undergraduate honors thesis

adviser (spring 2012).

Ovik Bannerjee, UNC (Environmental Sciences). Thesis: Evaluating country-level population vulnerabilities to water access due to climate related hazards using high spatial resolution methods. Ovik was awarded ‘Highest Honors’ and the “Most Outstanding Research Award” in Environmental Sciences for the Class of 2012 for this work. His honors thesis work led to the publication of:

Exposure to climate related hazards: a global assessment of population exposure to cyclone, drought and flood. Elizabeth Christenson, Mark Elliott, Ovik Banerjee, Laura Hamrick, Jamie Bartram. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11(2), 2169−2192.

Ovik won a Venture for America Fellowship on graduation and was in Las Vegas working on that when he sadly died in January 2014.

MSEE academic and thesis adviser

(fall 2011)

Zai Kang Chang, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Water Safety Plan cost analysis: explanation building with case studies in the Western Pacific Region. He published two journal paper based on his thesis work:

Water Safety Plan Cost Analysis: explanation building with case studies in the Western Pacific Region. Zai Kang Chang, Mien Ling Chong and Jamie Bartram. Water Sci Tech: Water Supply 13(5) pp1358−1366, 2013.

A Comparative Assessment of Institutional Frameworks for Managing Drinking Water Quality. Zarah Rahman, Jonny Crocker, Kang Chang, Ranjiv Khush and

Jamie Bartram. J Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 2011, 01.4 pp 242–258.

Kang went on to work on social enterprise and poverty alleviation at the William Davidson Institute (Ann Arbor, MI); to become an innovation fellow at Innovatrium Institute of Innovation (Ann Arbor MI); and subsequently as innovation adviser at RTI.

MS academic and thesis adviser (fall

2011)

Edema Ojomo, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Edema won a Don and Jennifer Holzworth Merit Scholarship for her Master’s studies. Thesis: Climate Change Adaptation Preparedness in Developing Countries: A Study of

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21 Countries and Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Studies in Akwa Ibom and Lagos States in Nigeria. Her work was published as:

Climate Change Preparedness: A Knowledge Attitudes and Practices Study in Southern Nigeria. Ojomo E, Elliott M; Amjad, U and Bartram J. Environments 2015, 2, 435–448; doi:10.3390/environments2040435.

Edema continued to PhD studies with me on graduation (see above).

MS academic and thesis adviser (2011)

Elizabeth Morris, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Specifications and Design Criteria for a Packaging Sanitation Solution for Peri-urban Areas in Developing Countries. Elizabeth was given a UNC mentoring award in 2010 for her collaboration with Tam Le, an undergraduate researcher also working with me, the collaboration lead to a publication based largely on Elizabeth’s thesis research:

A modified method to determine the value for sanitation: Case Study on the Willingness to Pay for Sanitation in Peri-urban households of Peru. Morris, E.L, Le, T.T. Waterlines. July 2012.

Elizabeth went on to found ‘Sanitation Creations’ to revolutionize the portable toilet industry while being socially and environmentally responsible. In 2012 the company was 3rd of 48 in UNC Business School’s ‘Launch the Venture’ and the top social venture; was chosen for Cherokee Investment Partners’ green technology accelerator program, receiving $20,000 in seed funding, office space, and mentorship; and was presented second runner-up by Nobel Laureate Mohammed Yunis in the inaugural UNC Social Business Conference. In 2013 it won the won the faculty/staff/alumni track of the Carolina Challenge finals and $5000; and was a finalist in ‘Dream Big America’.

MSEE Committee Member (2011)

Andrew Armstrong, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Characterization of Ionic Copper for Disinfection of Stored Drinking-Water (adviser: Sobsey). Andrew collaborated with us in the Water Institute in writing:

Technologies for Climate Change Adaptation – the Water Sector. Mark Elliott, Andrew Armstrong, Joseph Lobuglio and Jamie Bartram, 2011. Pp128. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Risoe Centre. Roskilde, Denmark.

Andrew also secured a Graduate Certificate in Global Health during his graduate studies. He went on to work for Water Mission (Charleston, SC), becoming their Community Development Programs Officer in 2013 and subsequently Director of Community Development.

MPH academic and thesis adviser (2011)

Christian Jasper (nee Hughes), UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: The Availability of Water and Sanitation Facilities in Schools Contributing to Health and Educational Outcomes: A Systematic Review. Christian published one paper based on her thesis work:

Water and Sanitation in Schools: a systematic review of the health and hygiene outcomes. Hughes C; Le, TP and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2012, 9, 2772–2787; doi:10.3390/ijerph9082772.

Christian was admitted to Medical School on graduation.

MSPH Committee member (2011)

Angela Wang, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Influence of Land Use and Storm Events on Dissolved Organic Matter Quantity and Quality in the Jordan Lake Watershed (adviser: Stewart).

MSEE academic and thesis adviser

(2011)

Jonathan Crocker, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Characterization and Cost Modelling of Drinking-water Quality Monitoring in India and Jordan. This work lead to verbal conference presentations and to the

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publication of:

A Comparative Assessment of Institutional Frameworks for Managing Drinking Water Quality. Zarah Rahman, Jonny Crocker, Kang Chang, Ranjiv Khush and

Jamie Bartram. J Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 2011, 01.4 pp 242 – 258.

Water Quality Laboratories in Colombia: a GIS-based study of urban and rural accessibility. Wright J, Liu J, Bain R, Perez A, Crocker J, Bartram J and Gundry S. Science of the Total Environment 2013 485 643–652.

Comparison and Cost Analysis of Drinking Water Quality Monitoring Requirements versus Practice in Seven Developing Countries. Crocker J and Bartram J. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11, 7333–7346.

Jonny continued to PhD studies with me on graduation (see above).

MS Committee member (2011)

Oluwaseyi Ibidapo, UNC (Environmental Sciences and Engineering). Thesis: Pilot Study to Quantify Microbial Contamination of Drinking-water and Assess Water Collection and Treatment Practices Among Students In Lagos State Model College Boarding Houses (adviser: Sobsey).

PhD co-adviser (2009)

Alex McKie. Thesis: Limitations to the introduction of water safety management in Caribbean Island States. University of Surrey, UK. This work lead to publication with me of:

Framework for Drinking-water Safety in Saint Lucia: A Water Safety Plan Approach. McKie A, Colbourne J, Bartram J, Clarke B and Theobalds A. Paper presented at 32nd WEDC International Conference, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 13 – 17

November 2006; pp 593 - 597 in Sustainable Development of Water Resources, Water Supply and Environmental Sanitation (Proceedings of the 32nd WEDC International Conference, J Fisher (Ed), 2007 (peer reviewed).

Framework for Drinking-water Safety in Saint Lucia: Health-based Targets. McKie A, Bartram J, Colbourne J, Clarke B and Theobalds A. Paper presented at 32nd WEDC International Conference, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 2006; pp 600–607

597 in Sustainable Development of Water Resources, Water Supply and Environmental Sanitation (Proceedings of the 32nd WEDC International Conference, J Fisher (Ed), 2007 (peer reviewed).

PhD Examiner (2006)

Tom Clasen, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. Thesis: Household Water Treatment for the Prevention of Diarrhoeal Disease.

DrPH co-adviser, (2005)

Roisin Rooney. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. Thesis: Water Safety on Ships. This work lead to publication of two peer reviewed papers with me:

A Review of Outbreaks of Foodborne Disease Associated with Passenger Ships: Evidence for Risk Management. Rooney R, Cramer E, Mantha S, Nichols G, Bartram J, Farber J and Benembarek P. Public Health Reports vol 119(4) pp 427–434, 2004. PMID: 15219800.

A Review of Outbreaks of Waterborne Disease Associated with Ships: Evidence for Risk Management. Rooney R, Bartram J, Cramer E, Mantha S, Nichols G, Suraj R, Todd E. Public Health Reports Vol 119(4) pp 435–442, 2004. Review. PMID: 15219801.

Roisin went on to work for the World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe, ECDC and the European Commission, initially in water-related posts and subsequently in food safety.

MPhil co- adviser (2004)

Fiona Gore. University of Lausanne, Switzerland. Thesis: Selenium, Water and Health. This work lead to publication with me of:

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Too Much or Too Little? A Review of the Conundrum of Selenium. Gore F, Fawell J and Bartram J. PMID: 20375470. Journal of Water and Health 08(3), 2010 pp 405–416.

PhD Examiner (2003)

Andrew Trevett, Cranfield University, Silsoe College, UK. Thesis: Public Health Impact of Household Drinking-water Contamination.

PhD Examiner (2001)

Caroline Hoglund, University of Stockholm, Sweden. Thesis: Safe Use of Urine in Agriculture. Principal ‘opponent’.

Course development and teaching

Academic Year 2017–2018

Invited speaker on ENVR 475 / 775: Global Climate Change: Inter-disciplinary Perspectives, 9th October 2017, on Climate Change and Access to Clean Water.

Principal instructor (co-instructor with Mark Sobsey and Mike Fisher) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 682 (3 credits). 6 students (1 Doctoral, 2 Master’s, 3 undergraduate). Spring semester 2018. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of ENVR 684 Communicating Water and Health Research (2 credits). 8 students (6 Master’s, 2 undergraduate). Spring semester 2018.

2 x 45 minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Chemicals (delivered collaboratively with Lisa Pfadenhauer) as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University. May 2017.

Academic Year 2016–2017

Principal instructor (co-instructor with Mark Sobsey and Mike Fisher) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 682 (3 credits). 6 students (1 Master’s, 5 undergraduate). Spring semester 2017. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

1 x 1-hour Educational webinar (1CPD credit with on-line test) on WaSH and Safe Health Care for Royal Society for Public Health, 5th April 2017. 157 registrants from 31 countries.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of ENVR 684 Communicating Water and Health Research (2 credits). 6 students (1 doctoral, 4 Master’s, 1 undergraduate). Spring semester 2017.

Invited speaker on EVR 475 / 775: Global Climate Change: Inter-disciplinary Perspectives on 27 Sept 2016 on Climate Change and Access to Clean Water.

2 x 45 minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Chemicals (delivered collaboratively with Lisa Pfadenhauer) as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University. May 2016.

Academic Year 2015–2016

Principal instructor/co-instructor (with Mark Sobsey and Mike Fisher) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 682 (3 credits). 16 students (1 Doctoral, 7 Master’s, 8 undergraduate). Spring semester 2016. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of ENVR 684 Communicating Water and Health Research (2 credits). 12 students (3

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doctoral, 7 Master’s, 2 undergraduate). Spring semester 2016.

1 x 1-hour Educational webinar (1CPD credit with on-line test) on water and health: sustainable development goals for Royal Society for Public Health, 9th September 2015. 400 registrants from 60 countries.

2 x 45 minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Chemicals (delivered collaboratively with Lisa Pfadenhauer) as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University. May 2015.

Academic Year 2014–2015

Principal instructor/co-instructor (with Mark Sobsey and Mike Fisher) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 890.007 (3 credits). 7 students (5 Master’s, 2 undergraduate). Spring semester 2015. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) ENVR 684 001 Communicating Water and Health Research (2 credits). 12 students. (1 doctoral, 8 Master’s and 3 undergraduate). Spring semester 2015.

Sole Instructor of Paper Writing on Water-health Research ENVR 890.004 (2 credits). 5 students (5 doctoral). Fall semester 2014.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of Water and Health Research ENVR 683.001 (2 credits). 10 students 1 doctoral, 9 Master’s). Fall semester 2014.

1 x 1-hour teaching on Critical Issues in WaSH and Global Health for PUBH 510 “Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Global Health”. 25th September 2014. A graduate level class also open to senior level undergrads. One of the foundational courses for the Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

2 x 45 minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Chemicals (delivered collaboratively with Lisa Pfadenhauer) as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University. May 2014.

Taught on webinar on water safety plans in buildings, with subsequent assessment component for CEU credits, for RSPH. [ADD DATE]

Academic Year 2013–

2014 Principal instructor/co-instructor (with Mark Sobsey) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 890.007 (3 credits). 3 Master’s students (poor attendance due to administrative failure to list the course). Spring semester 2014. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) ENVR 890.005 Communicating Water and Health Research (2 credits). 9 students (2 doctoral, 5 Master’s and 2 undergraduate). Spring semester 2014.

Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of Water and Health Research (2 credits). 9 students (2 doctoral, 4 Master’s and 3 undergraduate). Fall semester 2013.

Does Water or Sanitation Access Really Matter? January 23rd, 2014 – US Water Partnership Webinar.

1 x 1-hour Educational webinar (1CPD credit with on-line test) on water hygiene in buildings for Royal Society for Public Health, 22nd January 2014.

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400 registered attendees from 60 countries.

1 x 1.5-hour teaching on Global Health Challenges: Water and Sanitation for Duke University introductory Master’s course on Global Health Challenges (course instructor Chris Woods), part of MSc on Global Health. 29 Oct 2013.

1 x 1-hour teaching on Critical Issues in WaSH and Global Health for PUBH 510 “Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Global Health”. September 11th, 2013. A graduate level class also open to senior level undergrads. One of the foundational courses for the Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

2 x 45 minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Chemicals (delivered collaboratively with Lisa Pfadenhauer) as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University.

Academic Year 2012–

2013 Principal instructor/co-instructor (with Mark Sobsey) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 890.007 (formerly ENVR471). 12 students (2 undergraduate, 9 Master’s and 1 doctoral). Spring semester 2013. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

Developer and co-instructor (instructor of record) of new 1 credit seminar course ‘Water in Our World’ ENVR 890-005. 16 students (1 doctoral, 2 graduate, 13 undergraduate). Spring semester 2013. Recognized as a contributing course to Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

Developer and co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of new 2 credit course Writing and Presenting Water-Health Research Findings. ENVR 890-005. 7 students (3 doctoral, 4 Master’s). Spring semester 2013.

Water at UNC and the Community. Philosophy 562: Ethics, responsibility and Justice. April 16th (1 hour).

Water to Live for and die by. Presentation for Carolina Science Café (single presenter followed by Q&A session), 7th March 2013. Carolina Science Café is a monthly educational program for adults, offering a behind-the-scenes look at cutting-edge research. (March 2013).

1 x 1.5 hours teaching on ‘Water Safety and One Health’ for One Health Intellectual Exchange Group (a UNC-Duke University-NC State University Collaborative), 15th January 2013.

Developer and Co-instructor (with Jackie MacDonald and Jill Stewart) of new 2 credit course Water and Health Research. 15 students (4 doctoral, 11 Master’s). Fall semester 2012.

Water (WaSH) and Global Health. PUBH500 Global Health Discussion Series 24th October 2012. 1.5 hours. Evaluation reported this to be the best session of the series.

WaSH and Global Health 1 x 1 hour for PUBH 510 “Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Global Health”. September 26th 2012. A graduate level class open to senior undergrads. One of the foundational courses for the Gillings Graduate Global Health Certificate.

1 x 1.25-hour teaching Water and Health Research for ENVR 601:

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Epidemiology for Environmental Scientists and Engineers, Aug 2012.

2 x 45-minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water and Sanitation as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University, 18.6.2012.

Academic Year 2011–

2012 Principal instructor/co-instructor (with Mark Sobsey) of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 890.008 (formerly ENVR471). Eight students (1 senior undergraduate, 6 Master’s and one PhD). Course evaluation (based on 100% response: overall instructor evaluation 4.88 (Dept Mean 4.55); overall course evaluation 4.62 (Dept mean 4.19). Feedback from one student: “From critically reviewing publications to understanding the history and progression of the field, I feel that I learned more from your class than almost any other course that I have taken in the SPH.”

1 x 1.5 hours teaching on ‘Water Safety and One Health’ for One Health Intellectual Exchange Group (a UNC-Duke University-NC State University Collaborative), 13th March 2012.

1 x 1.5-hour teaching on Global Health Challenges: Water and Sanitation for Duke University introductory Master’s course on Global Health Challenges, part of MSc on Global Health. 29 Nov 2011.

UNC PUBH500: Global Health Certificate Discussion Series 1 x 90-minutes presentation and participation in discussion on interdisciplinary perspectives in Global health. (Sept 2011).

2 x 45-minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water and Sanitation as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University, 24.6.2011.

Academic year 2010–

2011 Developer and co-instructor with Mark Sobsey of WaSH and Global Health ENVR 471. New 3-credit course, Spring semester. Principal instructor (co-instructor Prof M Sobsey) 29 x 1.25hr sessions.

UNC-Global Global Health Discussion Series 1 x 60-minutes presentation and participation in discussion (March 2011).

UNC PUBH500: Global Health Certificate Discussion Series 1 x 90-minutes presentation and participation in discussion on Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Global Health. This class was rated as one of top three of the whole course by both students and lecturers (Oct 2010).

1 x 1-hour teaching on Global Water, Sanitation and Public Health for UNC Certificate in Global Health course, 6 October 2010.

1 x 2-hours teaching on International relations in practice: how a specialised agency such as WHO collaborates with government institutions, universities, medical schools, NGOs, national research institutions to achieve its core functions. Syracuse University NY summer course on International Relations, July 2010, John Knox Centre, Geneva.

2 x 45 minutes teaching 17 June 2010 on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University (delivered through voice-over-powerpoint).

Academic year 2009–2010

1 x 1-hour teaching on Progressive Development of Evidence for Policy in Water and Health at the World Health Organization for UNC Preventive Dentistry Program, March 2010.

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1 x 1.25 hr nutrition doctoral seminar 3 Feb 2010.

1 x 1.25 hr Spring semester undergraduate lecture on water and health

1 x 30 minutes teaching on Overview of WatSan in Health and Development for Morehead undergraduate students at UNC, 13 Nov 2009.

1 x 45 minutes teaching on Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Public Health for UNC Certificate in Global Health course, 14 Oct 2009.

2 x 45 minutes teaching on Environment and Health Policy: Water, Sanitation and Chemicals as part of Global Public Health Module of MPH at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University, 25 June 2009 (14 students) (teaching was evaluated with top marks with respect to teaching methods, teaching materials, interaction with students and presentation skills)

Grants and Research Awards

Summary: Over my first nine years at UNC (mid-2009 to June 2018), I received more than 100 funded grants and awards, ranging in value from $1,500 to $2.1 million, for a total value of $15,226,843 from 46 different awarding bodies.”

Grants and awards since joining UNC in 2009 (ordered by end-date)

Wallace Genetic Foundation Bartram (PI) 6/1/18-5/31/19 $50,000

Life Cycle Costs of WaSH service delivery in health care facilities Describing the costs of Sustainable WASH service delivery in health care facilities. In this project, we explore the costs of water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions in health care facilities. Role: PI Corona Environmental Consulting/Water Research Foundation Bartram (co-PI) 9/5/2017–6/1/2020 $46,957

Evaluation of Risk Management Systems and their Application for Managing Source Water Hazards Under the Safe Drinking Water Act, Source Water Assessment Programs (SWAPs) identify existing and potential sources of contamination in U.S. source waters, determine the susceptibility of water supplies to these potential contamination sources, and disseminate results to the public. This project is designed to fill the gap between the SWAP assessment and effective and practical risk management for public health protection. The proposed research will review existing risk management frameworks and tools used worldwide to select a method for pilot testing at four large utilities in the U.S. The pilot study is expected to document the feasibility and benefits of source water risk management, and facilitate future uptake of the selected approach among U.S. utilities. Role: co-PI

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Bartram (co-PI) 10/14/2016–9/30/2019 $589,944

PHASE 2: Proof of Concept of Estimates of the Unsafe Return of Human Excreta to the Environment. In Dhaka, Bangladesh, 99% of human wastes are deposited in some form of toilet but only 2% safely returned to the environment; the remainder were dumped in open space, drains, or natural water courses. The Water Institute is modeling sanitation-related health hazards at the national level. Our work considers the effects of technologies and time upon the numbers of pathogens being released to the environment. This reveals surprising insights. Lengthy storage of wastes makes hygienic pit latrines an effective means of pathogen control. By contrast, sewerage can be relatively dangerous due to the short time and poor pathogen removal before discharge. Septic tanks lie somewhere in between. We will next use these models at both a large

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scale, for country comparison and evaluation over time, and at a smaller scale, to inform local decision making. Role: co-PI UNICEF Pacific Bartram (PI) 08/17– 01/2019 $89,132

WASH Sector Monitoring in Pacific Island Countries. Taken as a group, the Pacific Island Countries failed to meet the MDG target for drinking water and sanitation. The Water Institute’s collaboration with UNICEF Pacific aims to strengthen national WaSH monitoring and implementation in the SDG era with a focus on Fiji, Kiribati, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu. In each country, the Water Institute will support UNICEF and their local government and NGO partners through data analysis and recommendations for systems strengthening. Role: PI World Vision Bartram (PI) 1/2016 – 01/2019 US $1,455,862

Program monitoring, evaluation and learning for WaSH: The project team will expand national CQI programs and develop national monitoring plans in multiple African countries. Procedures for collecting, analyzing, and monitoring WaSH data will be harmonized across locations and between The Water Institute and World Vision to support programmatic decision-making. An integrated knowledge management (KM) strategy will also be developed and implemented to ensure that knowledge and awareness of World Vision’s WaSH activities and learnings is developed, retained, and shared to support and improve rural water supply service delivery. Role: PI Wallace Genetic Foundation Bartram (PI) 11/2017-11/2018 $50,000

Understanding the costs of water, sanitation, and environmental health services in health care

facilities. In this study, we conduct a systematic review of the costs of water, sanitation, and hygiene in health care facilities and develop an instrument to collect life cycle cost data to understand the costs of services in health care facilities. Role: PI Wallace Genetic Foundation Bartram (PI) 11/2016-10/2018 US $80,000

Generating evidence for advocacy: Improving the status of water, sanitation, and hygiene in health

care facilities and community settings. This research builds on previously funded work on the status of WaSH in Health Care Facilities (HCFs) and successful processes that support highly functional community-managed water systems, namely post-construction support (PCS). To increase awareness among those responsible for improving the effectiveness of healthcare services, this research will develop strategies to include environmental conditions in requirements for service provision, leverage Water Institute work to pilot training materials in Malawi, convene events and seek collaborations to create awareness of the dimensions of the problem of infections in health care settings. Research on PCS will continue to build evidence for advocacy and to explore mechanisms to effectively translate PCS research into action by practitioners, donors, and policy makers. Role: PI P&G (cumulative total – renewed annually) Bartram (PI) 5/2010 – 7/2018 US$330,000

HWTS network: UNC support to WHO and others. The International Network on Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage is a global alliance of over 100 research institutions, private sector firms, NGOs and governments working to advance and scale up household water treatment and safe storage and reduce the burden of diarrhoeal disease. The Network was launched in 2003 by WHO, joined by UNICEF as co-host in 2011, and since 2010 communications support has been provided by the Water Institute at the University of North Carolina. Role: PI P&G Bartram and Hoffman (co-PIs) 06/2016 – 07/2018 US$44,951

Malawi health care facilities assessment According to recent national surveys, health facilities in Malawi

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have alarmingly low coverage of sanitation and hand washing facilities. The Water Institute in collaboration with UNC School of Medicine will assess health care facilities and through data analysis and recommendations for systems improving conditions. Ultimately, findings will contribute to evidence-based operational research in health care facilities inform program and policy development, and decision makers and local actors. Role: Co-PI 06/2016 – 07/2018 US$44,951 Medentech Bartram (PI) 8/1/2017 – 5/2018 $70,658

Reformulation of Aquatabs to enhance inactivation of protozoan cysts and other chlorine-resistant

pathogens. In this study, the disinfection efficacy of several candidate chemical disinfectant combinations was assessed with respect to the inactivation of Clostridium perfringens spores and Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in small scale lab experiments. Efficacy was compared to conventional sodium dichloroisocyanurate tablets (Aquatabs®). Role: PI Various Bartram (Conference co-Director) 5/2017– 5/2018 US $66,688 registration fees

US $14,000 sponsorship

UNC Water Microbiology Conference, Chapel Hill, 22-24, May 2018. Three-day event attracting 174 participants from16 countries. Academic component attracted 98 abstracts of which 54 oral and 44 poster presentations were accepted. Workshop and networking component attracted 6 proposals of which 6 were accepted, leading to events organized by 34 international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Gold Level ($5,000), Bio-Rad; Silver ($3,000) NSF International, Scientific Methods; Bronze ($1,500) Neogen, InnovaPrep. Role: PI (Conference Director)

World Vision Bartram (PI) 5/2015 – 5/2018 US $150,000

Solar water pumping and disinfection initiative: World Vision, United Solar Initiative, Strata Solar Corporation and the Water Institute at UNC have established a joint solar water pumping and disinfection initiative. Under this pilot project, USI/Strata Solar will provide designs of solar arrays to be used to power water pumps for World Vision’s water programs in Kenya. The Water Institute at UNC’s evaluation of the pilot will assist World Vision to achieve its goal of reaching one new person with clean water every 10 seconds by 2020. Role: PI Suez Environnement Bartram (PI) 10/2014 – 4/2018 US$185,001

Water Safety Planning: Measuring Gains and Implementing Effective Practices: Water Safety Plans (WSPs) prevent drinking water contamination before it happens at every stage from catchment to tap. WSP approach includes improved maintenance policies and procedures, systematic repair of pipes, a cleaning plan, backflow prevention, and a range of improvements in the system. The Water Institute at UNC will evaluate the impact of WSPs on drinking water quality and public health of populations served by utilities in Spain and France and inform Suez Environnement of the potential of WSPs to contribute tangible benefits. Role: PI UNICEF Ethiopia Bartram (PI) 11/2015 – 4/2018 US $459,582

Midline survey for the integrated WASH/MUS/CBN program in AMHARA, OROMIA, SNNPR, and Tigray

Regions: This project conducts a midline survey in several regions of Ethiopia to assess the linkages between WASH and Community Based Nutrition (CBN) and their relative impacts on child health. The midline study builds off a baseline survey recently completed, and will support the implementation of an end-line survey. The mid-line survey will assess the relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, sustainability and impact of the Wet Nutrition program that combines projects in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), Multiple Use WASH Services (MUS) and CBN by comparing outcome and impact results between baseline and midline. The programs of study are funded by UNICEF and the governments of Canada and the Netherlands and is conducted jointly with the Government of Ethiopia.

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Role: PI Various Bartram PI (Conference co-Director) 5/2017 – 5/2018 US $39,650 registration fees

US $8,000 sponsorship

Nexus 2018: Water, Food, Energy and Climate, Chapel Hill, 18-20, April 2018. Three-day event attracting 124 participants from 32 countries. Academic component attracted 135 abstracts of which 72 oral and 40 poster presentations were accepted. Sponsorship received: Silver Level ($8,000) The Kaizen Company Role: PI (Conference co-Director) Water Aid Bartram (PI) 9/2017-3/1/2018

Implementing advanced water, sanitation, and hygiene (WaSH) monitoring, evaluation, and learning

(MEL) indicators and continuous quality improvement (CQI) methods. The Water Institute continues its collaboration with WaterAid Burkina Faso to implement the next phase of the continuous quality improvement project (CQI). This project will be expanded to 38 communities with ongoing monitoring of communities that have already received the CQI improvement intervention. Water Institute will assist with conducting endline monitoring, analyze results and generate conclusions about the impact of the intervention as well as recommendations regarding potential scale-up of the improvement package to additional households and communities in Burkina Faso Role: PI World Health Organization (WHO) Bartram (PI) 8/1/2017–1/1/2018 $11,600

Identifying indicators for SDG target 6.b. This project will review participation in WaSH to identify indicators to measure the SDG means of implementation target 6.b. to "support and strengthen the participation of local communities in improving water and sanitation management.” The GLAAS data and other data sources will be reviewed and analyzed to understand the limitations and challenges of measuring participation in WaSH. Role: PI Various Conference Director 10/2017–10/2018 US $230,130 registration fees

US $155,500 sponsorship

UNC Water and Health: Where Science Meets Policy, Chapel Hill, 16-20 October 2017. Five-day event attracting 659 participants from 39 countries. Academic component attracted 390 abstracts of which 96 oral and 120 poster presentations were accepted. Workshop and networking component attracted 74 proposals of which 56 were accepted, leading to events organized by 41 international collaborating organizations, including a two day regulatory workshop with the World Health Organization the weekend prior to the event. Sponsorship received: Platinum level ($25,000) Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Osprey Foundation; Gold Level ($15,000), World Vision, Watermill Express, P&G Children’s Safe Water Drinking Program; Silver Level ($8,000) The International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, Kohler Clarity; Bronze Level ($4,000) Antenna Foundation, Aquagenx, Aqua Research, Aquatabs, Catholic Relief Services, MSR Global Health, NSF International, Plan International USA, Practical Action Publishing, RTI International, Sawyer, SNV, Tomlinson, UNC African Studies Center, UNC Institute for the Environment; Friends of the Conference ($1,500) FHI 360, and Elsevier. Role: PI (Conference Director) Wallace Genetic Bartram (PI) 11/2016–10/2017 $34,481

Post-Construction Support. Despite increasing evidence that post-construction support (PCS) activities can increase functionality of rural water supply systems, many organizations that fund and/or implement water and WaSH programs put the majority of their efforts into front-end construction and capacity building work and do not plan for PCS activities. Building on the results of our previous work on PCS strategies and impacts, the Water Institute will continue to build evidence for advocacy on PCS and explore mechanisms to effectively translate PCS research into action by practitioners, donors, and policy makers, including development of a PCS working group. Role: PI Global Environment Technology Foundation (GETF) Bartram (PI)

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3/1/2017-8/25/2017 $25,047

Water and Development Alliance (WADA) Case Study - Alignment with the Sustainable Development

Goals To support WADA’s work, the Water Institute developed a case study that describes concrete programmatic approaches to be integrated into developing water programs in order to align with and maximize the impact of the SDGs. Tasks completed included: 1) background research and interviews with project stakeholders on the WADA program and how these responded to improve access to WaSH during the MDGs; 2) background research on the SDGs to highlight key changes; 3) best practices were identified in the WADA portfolio; 4) research was conducted across the water sector to recommend best practices for advancing the SDGs, including programs outside the WADA portfolio in countries from the WADA portfolio. The Water Institute coordinated with WADA partners on each task and incorporated feedback. Role: PI UNICEF Pacific Bartram (PI) 3/2016 – 7/2017 US$98,953

WaSH sector monitoring in the Pacific: Taken as a group, the Pacific Island Countries failed to meet the MDG target for drinking water and sanitation. The Water Institute’s collaboration with UNICEF Pacific aims to strengthen national WaSH monitoring and implementation in the SDG era with a focus on Fiji, Vanuatu, and Solomon Islands. In each country, the Water Institute will support UNICEF and their local government and NGO partners through data analysis and recommendations for systems strengthening. Role: PI World Health Organization (WHO) Bartram (PI) 11/21/2016–7/2017 $15,444

WASH in health systems in the European Region: a situation report. The Water Institute completed a situation report for WHO on water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH) in health care facilities for the European region, based on a literature review, case studies and interviews. A total of 3,119 studies were found in the peer-reviewed literature search. The results of the peer-reviewed literature search were combined with 112 studies identified in the grey literature search, for a total of 3,231 studies. After initial duplicates were removed upon adding the search results to Covidence, a systematic review management software, 2595 studies remained for title and abstract screening. After screening, 728 studies entered full text review. After full text review, 94 were selected for data extraction and synthesis. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic review designed to characterize the current status of water, sanitation, and hygiene infrastructure, including infection control procedures, medical waste management, and ecological impacts of hospital wastewater. Our search provided important insight into commonly faced infections, potential environmental reservoirs, effective management techniques, and non-hospital facilities that are impacted by WaSH-related issues. Role: PI World Bank Bartram (PI) 05/18/2017-6/30/2017 $30,000

Study on Smart subsidies for water and sanitation. The Water Institute supported the World Bank Group to define the scope and action plan of a knowledge activity to revisit the subsidies for the water and sanitation sector. The tasks for this assignment included: 1) Framing the discussion on the flow of funds among the three main actors of utility/service financing, 2) Conducting a Literature Review on the types of subsidies and then estimating the amount of subsidies provided to the sector including the financing sources, as well the allocation (what is subsidized, who receives the benefit of the subsidy and 3) Proposing activities needed to be undertaken to develop a comprehensive understanding of subsidies schemes worldwide and provide practical advice on smarter approaches to provide subsidies for the water and sanitation sector ensuring that low income households can access and afford high quality services. Role: PI PLAN-International/USA Bartram (co-PI) 10/2011 – 6/2017 US $1,115,188 (under UNC

management)

Testing Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) approaches for scalability: This project comprises three components. The first involves learning from the monitoring and evaluating of pilots of modes of facilitation for Community-Led Total Facilitation in Ghana, Ethiopia, and Kenya. The second involves capturing standardized metrics for sanitation programming and completing a broad literature review. The third component involves sharing and disseminating knowledge collected through innovative avenues. Role: PI

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World Health Organization (WHO) Bartram (co-PI) 10/17/2016-4/28/2017 $21,319

Updating the Water Safety Plan Manual: The Water Institute assisted WHO to compile a report of recommendations for updating the Water Safety Plan (WSP) Manual published in 2009. Researchers first consolidated experiences from different WSP users to identify areas of the WSP manual needing improvement such as incorporating diverse examples and experiences from different systems and recommendations from others involved in water programs. To complete a report for a WHO Global Training of Trainers meeting in 2017, Water Institute conducted interviews with WSP users with questions reviewed and approved by WHO. For the final report with recommendations, researchers reviewed lessons learned in available literature, and worked closely with WHO to identify contributors to the WSP manual as well as contact them to gather and consolidate their responses reactions to lessons learned and suggestions for improvements. Role: co-PI Terre des hommes (Tdh)– Mali Bartram (PI) 11/1/2016–3/31/2017 $16,531

Collaboration with Terre des Hommes Delegation in Mali on the Capitalization of experience in WaSH

in Health Care Facilities. The Water Institute completed a report for Tdh, particularly its delegation in Mali on the Tdh capacity building project for water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) in healthcare facilities (HCF). The report included a desk review of Mali’s health care system, the Tdh WASH in HCF capacity building project, analysis of Tdh monitoring data, key informant and direct beneficiary interviews and focus group discussions with the Tdh medical staff and the Association de Santé Communautaire (ASACO) conducted during field visits to health care facilities in Mali. This study exposed key benefits and challenges of Tdh’s health care facility environmental sanitation intervention in Ségou, Mali. Thirty-nine (39) interviews were carried out with participants who were involved in Tdh's program in both of the intervention districts in Ségou: Markala and Macina. The study identified eight (8) key recommendations for improving training and eight (8) key recommendations for improving monitoring. Our findings assist NGOs working with governments involved in health care facility improvement of environmental sanitation status to improve their approach to developing and implementing programs. Role: PI Conrad N Hilton Foundation Bartram (PI) 7/2012 – 12/2016 US $2,100,000

Monitoring and Evaluation of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Water, Sanitation and Hygiene

Initiative: This project engages a team of researchers to evaluate the funded programs and WASH initiatives of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. It employs a combination of research methods to assess and select WASH indicators for programs, measure initiative progress, and advise grantees on data collection. Key deliverables involve developing a learning tool to increase effectiveness of initiatives and developing a compendium of best practices and lessons learned. Role: PI Wells Fargo Foundation Bartram (PI) 9/2014 – 12/2016 US $225,000

Impact of Climate Extremes on US Drinking Water Vulnerability and Preparedness: Supported by the Wells Fargo Foundation, Water Institute researchers developed a state-by-state ranking system of the United States that show drinking water systems vulnerability to extreme climate event hazards. The Institute expands this work by incorporating future projections and a component specific to coastal areas. The researchers aim to use these rankings to affect practical action so that vulnerability to climate change can be mitigated. Role: PI International Water Centre/Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (Australia)

Bartram (PI)

7/2013 – 12/2016 US $133,903

Climate Change and Water Supply and Sanitation on Atolls and Flood-prone Catchments in the

Pacific. Climate change poses real threats to development and health in the Pacific, particularly through its impacts on freshwater resources. Water Institute researchers and collaborators will integrate climate change impacts and current practices to develop a framework that will enable communities and water managers to navigate from understanding impacts to evaluating adaptation options for water supply and sanitation, and

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work with stakeholders to explore risks for both atoll and flood-prone catchments, develop models that incorporate current management and adaptation opportunities and produce tools to aid in adapting to climate change. Role: PI International Water Centre/Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (Australia)

Bartram (PI)

4/2013 – 10/2016 US $89,965

Water and Sanitation Markets in the Pacific: Understanding Demand and Fostering Sustainable WaSH

Marketplaces. Water and sanitation marketing is employed with varying degrees of success to deliver services to impoverished urban and rural communities. This project will develop an understanding of rural water and sanitation markets and the demand for services in the Pacific region using a Community-based Participatory Research method. The research findings will provide WaSH sector stakeholders with guidance, advice and support on enabling sustainable, demand-driven water and sanitation services. This project is funded by the Australian Government DFAT and is in collaboration with the International WaterCentre, Monash University, University of the South Pacific and Live and Learn (an NGO). Role: PI Various Conference Director

October 2016 US $193,000 registration fees US $100,000 sponsorship

UNC Water and Health: Where Science Meets Policy, Chapel Hill, 10–14 October 2016. Five-day event attracting 582 participants from 34 countries. Academic component attracted 321 abstracts of which 96 oral and 96 poster presentations were accepted. Workshop and networking component attracted 67 proposals of which 47 were accepted, leading to events organized by 44 international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Platinum level ($25,000) Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gold Level ($15,000) Osprey Foundation, World Vision, P&G Children’s Safe Water Drinking Program; Silver Level ($7,000) The International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, Kohler Clarity; Bronze Level ($3,000) Aquagenx, Aquatabs, FHI 360, IMERYS, Madidrop, NSF International, Plan International USA, RTI International, Sawyer, UNC Institute for the Environment, Village Water Filters; Friends of the Conference ($1,000) International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, PSI, and Elsevier. Role: PI (Conference Director) LSHTM through a grant from USAID Bartram (PI) 9/2014 – 8/2016 US $378,030

Population Density, Neighborhood-Level Sanitation Access, and Health in Urban Maputo: Supported by the Wells Fargo Foundation, Water Institute researchers developed a state-by-state ranking system of the United States that show drinking water systems vulnerability to extreme climate event hazards. The Institute expands this work by incorporating future projections and a component specific to coastal areas. The researchers aim to use these rankings to affect practical action so that vulnerability to climate change can be mitigated. Role: PI charity: water Bartram (PI) 8/2015 – 7/2016 US $170,321

Development of a unified monitoring and evaluation system for charity: water and its partners: This Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning (MEL) project will support charity: water in developing a unified best-in-class monitoring and evaluation system. In addition, the project will build charity: water’s capacity to conduct advanced data-driven decision-making in three core areas: 1) Rigorous impact evaluation at the project, partner, and portfolio level, 2) evidence-based decision-making to further improve the performance of partners and programs and the overall portfolio; and 3) targeted grant making to select the highest-impact partners and programs. Role: PI World Vision and Wallace Genetics Foundation Bartram (PI) 3/2015 – 7/2016 US$96,774 (World Vision) +

US$25,000 (Wallace Genetics Foundation

Understanding Processes for Sustainability in Community-Managed Water Supply Systems: Some

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community-managed water systems in Sub-Saharan Africa continue to function for decades while others fail shortly after implementation. With support from World Vision, The Water Institute at UNC will explore and map processes that support highly functional community-managed water systems. Researchers will use qualitative and participatory research methods including interviews, focus groups, systems mapping, and observations in Ethiopia, Ghana, and Zambia. Insights from this study will inform improvements in policy and practices to advance health and productivity by sustaining water systems. Role: PI Wallace Genetic Foundation Bartram (PI) 7/2015 – 6/2016 US $50,000

Generating evidence for advocacy: Improving the status of water, sanitation, and hygiene in health

care facilities: The 2015 WHO and UNICEF report on the status of WaSH in Health Care Facilities (HCFs) emphasized the urgent need for improved water supply and adequate sanitation in health care facilities. This report highlighted health care facilities as an area that has been overlooked in the goal to improve the goal to achieve universal access to WaSH. Having led the report, the Water Institute is well positioned to conduct multiple literature reviews on WaSH in health care facilities to continue to strengthen the evidence base for advocacy to improve the status of WaSH in HCF worldwide. The reviews will enable practitioners, NGOs, donors, policy makers and others to improve decision making on WaSH in HCF. Role: PI WERF MacDonald-Gibson (PI) 3/2015 – 5/2016 US$121,289

Protecting Wastewater Treatment Plant Operators from Emerging Pathogens: A Preparedness

Protocol and On-Line Decision Support Tool: The Ebola outbreak prompted concern about wastewater treatment plant operators, sewer workers, and downstream communities who risk exposure to new, dangerous pathogens. Current guidelines for health facilities do not require fecal matter from infected patients to be treated before disposal to wastewater treatment systems. As a result, there is a critical need for rigorous and integrated decision support tools for water and wastewater utilities, hospitals, health officials, and community leaders to be prepared for the possibility of high-risk pathogens appearing in wastewater and prevent exposures. The Water Institute and affiliated UNC research faculty will 1) identify and assess emerging pathogen exposure pathways and risks, 2) develop a decision support tool to minimize the risks, 3) develop emergency preparedness protocols, and 4) disseminate the protocols and decision support tool. Role: Co-PI Various Conference Director May 2016 US$59,000 registration fees

US$13,000 conference sponsorship

UNC 2016 Water Microbiology Conference. Chapel Hill, 17-19 May 2016. Three-day event attracting 175 participants. Two-day academic component attracted 96 abstracts of which 56 oral and 37 poster presentations were accepted. Two-day side event component attracted eight side event proposals of which eight were accepted leading to side event and networking events organized by five collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Gold level (US$5,000): Bio-Rad; Silver level (US$2,500): NSF International, Scientific Methods; Bronze level (US$1,500): Aquagenex, Innova Prep. Role: PI (Conference co-Director) Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Kolsky (PI) 2/2015 – 4/2016 US$267,978

Unsafe Human Excreta Return to Environment: There is need to track human excreta beyond their initial deposit in toilets through to their final return to the environment, to ensure that the population is properly protected from the diseases spread by this waste. The Water Institute team will develop and pilot approaches for international agencies and countries to 1) estimate the fraction of human excreta unsafely returned to the environment, and 2) estimate where in the sanitation chain this occurs. The work is intended to inform the expected Sustainable Development Goal Target to reduce the amount of human excreta unsafely returned to the environment. Role: Co-PI WHO Bartram (PI) 1/2016 – 3/2016 US $15,000

Publications Analyzing UN-Water GLAAS data: The project team will conduct a multi-country evaluation to

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determine the influence of the enabling environment, specifically formal rules, on drinking-water and sanitation expenditure. Data on the enabling environment is obtained from Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-water (GLAAS). Multiple regression is carried out to achieve the project goal. Role: PI WHO Bartram (PI) 11/2015 – 3/2016 US $15,000

Literature Review for Update of Domestic Water Quantity Service, level and Health: The project team will conduct a literature review to update the World Health Organization (WHO) guidance document for Domestic Water Quantity, Service Level, and Health. This guidance document provides the evidence base for levels of water service and the minimum water quantity required for household consumption, domestic activities, and health. The team will review additional evidence that has been issued since the WHO guidance document was originally published in 2003 to ensure the WHO guidance is up to date. Role: PI Millennium Water Alliance Bartram (PI) 4/2015 – 1/2016 US$65,322

Integrated Water Quality and Self-Supply Study for MWA Phase 1 and Phase 2 in kebeles: There is little data about rural areas, particularly kebeles (communities), and even less data about household stored water (HSW) quality. An integrated water quality study is being conducted in more than 200 kebeles across Ethiopia. To gain a comprehensive understanding of both water quality levels at the source and in HSW, and thus areas where MWA partner programming can improve water quality, a well-designed, rigorous, and sufficiently large water quality study is needed. Water will be tested for E. coli, fluoride, arsenic and pH and strengthened by the collection of water storage, sanitation and hygiene indicators to examine factors linked to water quality. The data in the results of the study will be shared with MWA and its partners and also made available to the Government of Ethiopia to improve water quality at the local and national levels. Role: PI UNICEF/NC Sea Grant Bartram, Sobsey and Stewart (co-

PIs) 11/2013 – 1/2016 US$299,996

Rapid Detection of Fecal Bacteria in Water by Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Specific Chromogenic

Substrates. Fecally-contaminated drinking water and the resulting waterborne disease is a persistent global problem. The detection and quantification of fecal contamination relies on slow (24+ hours) and costly culture methods. The Water Institute researchers and affiliates are exploring rapid detection of the enzymatic activities of E. coli based on the hydrolysis of an enzyme substrate producing a colored hydrolysis product for a rapid method to detect these bacteria in water to enable timely actions to either improve water quality or encourage the use of an alternative, safer water source. Role: Co-PI Vanguard (for a private donor) Bartram (PI) 2/2015 – 12/2016 US$150,000

WaSH Policy Research Digest: In 2013, The Water Institute at UNC hosted civil servants from the Ministry of Finance in six African countries to learn about water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH) decision making, particularly in Ministries of Finance and identified weaknesses of the WaSH sector. Currently, the WaSH sector lacks a resource that provides balanced information on best practice in policy, based soundly in evidence, and in an easy-to-access form for decision-makers. Key country actors face time and resource constraints which prevent them from finding and analyzing the myriad of existing (and often cumbersome and sometimes conflicting) research journals and publications to extract policy advice relevant to their WaSH programs. We believe in the value of a knowledge and information resource with the primary purpose of supporting decision makers to develop effective policy in countries that are faced with water, sanitation and hygiene challenges. The Water Institute works with partners to develop a WaSH Policy Research Digest that meets the evidence needs of in-country decision makers. Role: PI World Vision Bartram and Kolsky (Co-PIs) 2/2014 – 12/2015 US$364,078

Past Evaluation Review and Mid-Term Evaluation Design for FECC WaSH Program: World Vision is implementing a five-year water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH) program in ten countries across three regions

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of Africa. Researchers at the Water Institute carried out a review of WaSH evaluations in the sector and past evaluations for an evaluation framework for World Vision. The Institute facilitated trainings in East, West and South Africa in the design of the evaluation, before coordinating the facilitation of the evaluation and analyzing the results. The results will help World Vision improve WaSH program effectiveness and provide an opportunity to study the evaluation framework, factors that contribute to sustainability in rural water systems in Sub-Saharan Africa, and impact of long-term post-construction support. Role: Co-PI Avram/CDC/DINEPA Bartram (PI) 7/2014 – 11/2015 US$96,412

A National Strategy on Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage for the Government of Haiti: In recent years, the Government of Haiti has taken initial steps to increase the practice of household water treatment and safe storage (HWTS) by households at risk. Researchers at the Water Institute will develop and finalize a National Strategy on HWTS based on the Haitian context in accordance with DINEPA guidelines. These activities are expected to contribute to improved coordination of sector stakeholders and help create an environment for effective implementation of HWTS, ultimately leading to improved health and quality of life for many Haitians. Role: PI Various Conference Director October 2015 US$230,025 registration fees

US$120,000 conference sponsorship

UNC Conference Water for Health: Where Science Meets Policy, Chapel Hill, 26–30 October 2015. Five day event attracting 696 participants from 44 countries. Four-day academic component attracted 321 abstracts of which 96 oral and 108 poster presentations were accepted. Five-day workshop and networking component attracted 54 proposals of which 43 were accepted, leading to events organized by 49 international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Platinum level ($25,000) Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wells Fargo & Company; Gold Level ($15,000) Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, FHI 360, P&G Children’s Safe Water Drinking Program; Silver Level ($7,000) The International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, Middle East and North Africa Network of Water Centers of Excellence (MENA NWC), Plan International USA, PSI, RTI International, World Vision; Bronze Level ($3,000) Aquagenx, Aquatabs, Flogenic & MSR Global Health, CPI, Madidrop, NSF International, Sawyer, Tomlinson, Triangle Global Health Consortium, UNC Institute for the Environment, WaterAid, Water For People; Friends of the Conference ($1,000) Charity: Water, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. Role: PI (Conference Director)

Takata Corporation Bartram (PI)

11/2013 – 10/2015 US$20,444

Initial and Full Desk-based Reviews (Levels A and B): The Water Institute will identify areas where research is needed on promising technologies with potential to reduce illnesses and deaths from water-related diseases and associated contaminants. Our researchers will provide environmental scans, technology assessments and laboratory and field trials to address these questions. Role: PI Takata Corporation Bartram (PI) 5/2014 – 5/2015 US$104,635

Future Technologies for Water Competition: The Future Technologies for Water Competition (FTW) aims to identify breakthrough technologies for safe water with a sustainable business plan with wide-scale applicability. The Water Institute’s mission is to provide global academic leadership for economically, environmentally, socially and technically sustainable management of water, sanitation and hygiene for equitable health and human development and to be a vibrant, interdisciplinary center that unites faculty, students and partners from North Carolina and across developed and developing nations. To fulfill this mission, the Water Institute is committed to further innovation in sustainable water technologies. Role: PI Various Bartram (Conference Co-Director) May 2015 US$42,355 – Registration Fees

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US$14,000 – Sponsorship

UNC 2015 Water Microbiology Conference. Chapel Hill, 18–21 May 2015. Four-day event attracting 168 participants. Two-day academic component attracted 96 abstracts of which 56 oral and 37 poster presentations were accepted. Two-day side event component attracted 8 side event proposals of which 8 were accepted leading to side event and networking events organized by 5 collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Gold level (US$5,000): Bio-Rad; Silver level (US$2,500): NSF International; Bronze level (US$1,500): Artel, Aquagenex, Charm Sciences, Innovaprep; Friends of Conference (US$500): Bawell Health. Role: Conference Co-Director

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) MacDonald (Director) 12/2012 – 11/2014 US$100,000

Racial Disparities in Access to Public Water and Sewer Service in North Carolina: An Analysis of

Public Health Impacts and Policy Solutions: This project will assess disparities in public water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) service access in North Carolina, including the roles of race and socio-economic status, how lack of access contributes to health disparities and resulting health and economic costs, policy and institutional barriers that perpetuate WASH disparities, and potential solutions and benefits. Role: Mentor and Co-Director.

Engility Corporation/USAID Bartram (PI)

4/2014 – 10/2014 US$99,995

Diagnosing the Vulnerability of Drinking Water Infrastructure to Synergistic Climate-Related Hazards

in Coastal Cities. Approximately 40% of the global population lives on coastal areas representing one of the geographic regions most vulnerable to climate change which can lead to risks to urban infrastructure such as drinking water systems. The Water Institute are developing a model that will diagnose the risk and vulnerability of drinking water systems in coastal cities to synergistic climate change hazards, validating the model with intensive on-site field work in three USAID supported locations which have experienced multiple climate-related hazards, and testing the applicability of the model with community stakeholders. The results of this project will improve on current methods of assessing climate impacts, risks, and vulnerabilities to coastal areas and provide a new diagnostic tool to assess the vulnerability of drinking water infrastructure to synergistic climate change hazards in coastal areas of developing countries. Role: PI

Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium Bartram (PI)

3/2014 – 10/2014 US$20,000

Assessing Community Ownership and Pride in Tribal Water Services. More than any other U.S. population, Alaska Native and American Indian Tribes are struggling to establish safe and sustainable water services. The Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium and the Water Institute at UNC will measure the degree to which Tribal members and governments feel a sense of ownership and pride in their water service, determine if lack of ownership and pride can be linked to problems facing Tribal water systems, and explore motives that could be used in education-based interventions to increase their sense of ownership and pride. This work will contribute to increased consumption of treated water, decreased US Safe Drinking Water Act violations, sustainable operating and management of systems, and increased willingness to pay for water services, thus lowering rates of water-related disease. Role: PI

Various Bartram (Conference Director) October 2014 US$169,410 – Registration

US$63,000 – Sponsorship

UNC 2014 Water and Health Conference: Where Sciences Meets Policy. Chapel Hill, Five day event attracting 532 participants from 34 countries. Two day academic component attracted 375 abstracts of which 96 oral and 110 poster presentations were accepted. Three day side event component attracted 40 workshop proposals of which 36 were accepted leading to workshop and networking events organized by 40 collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Gold level (US$15,000 to $24,999): FHI360; Silver level (US$7,500 to $14,999): Futures Group; Bronze level (US$3,000 to $7,499): RTI International, IAPMO, Tomlinson Industries, NSF International, Aquagenex, UNC Institute for the Environment, Aqua Access, Solar Solutions, P&G, Plan USA. Role: PI (Conference Director)

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Wallace Genetic Foundation Bartram (PI) 11/2013 – 10/2014 US$24,997

Climate Change Impacts on Drinking Water and Sanitation Coverage: Determining Vulnerability and

Preparedness: This study engages a team of researchers developed a novel methodology to determine the vulnerability and preparedness of global drinking water systems to climate-related hazardous events and provided baseline assessments of exposure, resilience, and vulnerability to climate-related hazardous events. This third phase, our researchers will create an online data repository through which our results can be disseminated and continue to improve the model taking into account for aridity and water systems on coastal cities. Through this interface, vulnerability rankings will be easily accessible to policy makers and practitioners to make informed decisions. Role: PI Michael and Susan Dell Foundation Bartram (PI)

8/2013 – 6/2014 US$30,461

Understanding How Pilot Programs Become Self Sustaining at Scale Social Enterprises and Water in

Schools of Delhi and Jaipur. The Michael and Susan Dell Foundation has partnered with a social enterprise that delivers safe and affordable drinking water provided free to students with the intention of a gradual shift of costs to the surrounding community. With the MSDF’s goal to expand the pilot program and maintain leadership in poverty alleviation, the Water Institute will analyze the extent to which the pilot programs are achieving their anticipated impacts in schools and the surrounding community, define the steps needed to maximize the performance and transferability of the pilot program models, and work with the pilot schools, the local partner organizations, and the Foundation to implement any recommended changes. Second, UNC will work with MSDF and its grantees to develop a strategy for scale-up in additional schools and states, with the goal of ensuring sustainable, effective models of drinking water provision and sanitation in schools while continuing to maintain the level of impact on health and education. Role: PI

Various Conference Co-director May 2014 US $40,742 registration

US $4,200 sponsorship

UNC 2014 Water Microbiology Conference. Chapel Hill, 5–7 May 2014. Three-day event attracting 189 participants from 16 countries. One-and-a-half-day academic component attracted 138 abstracts of which 39 oral and 72 poster presentations were accepted. One-and-a-half-day workshop component attracted four workshop and networking events organized by three international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Bronze level (US$800 to $2,499): Aquagenx, BioGX, NSF International, Source Molecular, Thermo Fisher Scientific. Rome: Co-PI (Conference co-director)

WaterAid Bartram (PI)

2/2014 – 4/2014 US$16,443

Getting to zero – Defining Universal Access to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation and Understanding

Trajectories of Progress: There is a need to define “universality” for WaSH, explore how and why different countries progress at different rates, and use these findings to inform policy and set achievable targets. The research team will conduct a literature review on how “universal” is defined in other development targets and assess the relevance of different approaches for drinking water and sanitation. This project aims to inform the formulation of post-2015 goals, targets, and indicators relating to universal access to safe drinking water and sanitation. Role: PI

Various Conference co-Director March 2014 US $59,315 registration

US $ 98,955 sponsorship

UNC 2014 Nexus Conference. Chapel Hill 3–7 March 2014. Four-day event attracting 210 participants from 31 countries. Two-day academic component attracted 258 abstracts of which 56 oral and 22 poster presentations were accepted. More than 40 panellists participated in two days of plenary panel discussion and 25 international organizations collaborated on the conference. Sponsorship received: Platinum level

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(US$25,000+): Wells Fargo; Gold level (US$15,000 to $24,999): WWF UK; Silver level (US$7,000 to $14,999): BioVision, Futures Group, Millennium Institute, WSPA; Bronze level (US$3,000 to $6,999): Securing Water for Food, Monsanto, UNC Institute for the Environment, WWF. Role: Co-PI (Conference co-director)

Adam Smith International Bartram (PI) 3/2013 – 3/2014 US$136,958

Improving the Regulation, Monitoring and Quality of the Packed Water Industry in Sierra Leone: The packaged water industry is booming in Sierra Leone, but quality control, monitoring and oversight of this industry are currently weak or non-existent. The national study will identify major producers of packaged water at the national level, and review production processes and standards, as well as conduct preliminary monitoring of packaged water quality. The Water Institute will assist Focus 1000 in conducting a literature review of relevant packaged water studies and practices, KAP related to packaged water in Sierra Leone, preparations for fieldwork and analyzing the fieldwork data and preparing reports and recommendations regarding the implementation of a viable and effective regulatory scheme for ensuring the safety of packaged water in Sierra Leone. Role: PI

World Health Organization Bartram (PI)

12/2013 – 2/2014 US$30,680

Support the Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Health Unit in the Development of the WHO Guidelines on

Sanitation and Health. The WHO Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Health Unit engaged the Water Institute, in collaboration with Emory University, to provide technical support for conceptual planning, methodology later evidence retrieval and review for this effort of the initial draft guidelines. The Water Institute will perform an assessment to identify priority risks to address in policies and programs and focus on recommendations for said policies and programs. The development of sanitation and health guidelines for policies and programs addressing priority risk areas aims to improve the access to basic sanitation and health conditions compromised by poor sanitation. Role: PI

NEHA-CDC Bartram (PI) 12/2012 – 2/2014 US$42,533

Feasibility of Implementing Water Safety Plans (WSPs) in North Carolina: Water Safety Plans (WSPs) are a methodology developed by the World Health Organization to assess and manage risks within drinking water systems. WSP implementation has been limited in the US, and this project would help to ascertain the applicability of the process to the US context and its potential impacts. This project aims to explore and report on the feasibility of an exploratory project in North Carolina to identify the impacts of introduction of WSPs in small municipal and private water supply systems. The research team will spearhead pilot WSPs in 1-3 utilities throughout North Carolina and explore outcomes and impacts of the WSP implementation process. Role: PI

World Health Organization Bartram (PI)

11/2013 – 1/2014 US$7,910

Report on the Status of Water Sanitation and Hygiene WaSH and Environmental Conditions in Health

Care Facilities. Health care facilities (HCF) are high risk settings where basic services, like WaSH, are prerequisites to effectively treat and prevent disease. The international community has underscored the urgent need for action and monitoring WaSH in HCF in numerous proposals in the context of the post-2015 development agenda. National monitoring systems are weak or absent, and national targets to improve coverage may not be defined. The Water Institute was commissioned by the WHO to perform a rapid review of the current status WaSH in HCF, national WaSH in HCF policies and regulations, together with an examination of international and national monitoring mechanisms. The concluding report highlights key areas for improvement of WaSH in HCF resulting in implications for policy and practice. Role: PI

WaterAid Bartram (PI)

5/2012 – 12/2013 US$9,015

Monitoring Access to Drinking Water Beyond the Household: Review for JMP post 2015 Water

Working Group: This research aims to review norms and standards relating to non-household access to

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drinking water and identify potential indicators and data sources which could form a basis for enhanced monitoring at national and global levels. Country case studies are used to examine the feasibility of different approaches to monitoring access beyond household in low capacity settings in developing countries. Role: PI

WaterAid Bartram (PI) 12/2012 – 12/2013 US$14,984

How Safe Are Improved Sources? Water Quality in Low and Middle Income Countries: Review for JMP

post 2015 Water Working Group (Part II): This project aims to review evidence for the use of technology classifications as a means to judge safety in global reporting while comparing compliancy of health guidelines between water from improved and unimproved sources, analyzing consistency of compliance levels for improved sources between and within countries and addressing if some types of improved water sources are associated with higher levels of sanitary risk. Role: PI IAPMO Bartram (PI) 8/2011 – 12/2013 US$141,500 The Last Mile of Safe Drinking Water Delivery: This research seeks to reduce potential risks for recontamination between sources of safe water and people’s homes. Avenues such as policy, technology, education, codes and regulation are explored to develop risk reduction efforts. Role: PI

World Health Organization Bartram (PI)

10/2013 – 11/2013 US$6,850

Global Water Quality by Type, Source and Region. Global access to safe drinking-water is monitored by WHO and UNICEF using as an indicator “use of an improved source,” which does not account for water quality measurements. Water Institute researchers aimed to determine whether water from “improved” sources is less likely to contain fecal contamination than “unimproved” sources and to assess the extent to which contamination varies by source type and setting. The Water Institute researchers conclude that access to an “improved source” provides a measure of sanitary protection but does not ensure water is free of fecal contamination nor is it consistent between source types or settings. International estimates therefore greatly overstate use of safe drinking-water and do not fully reflect disparities in access. An enhanced monitoring strategy would combine indicators of sanitary protection with measures of water quality. Role: PI

Wells Fargo Bartram (PI) 12/2012 – 11/2013 US$50,000

State-by-state US ranking of drinking water and sanitation systems for climate change vulnerability

and preparedness: This study aims to produce a detailed model that analyzes and ranks U.S. states by their preparedness and vulnerability to climate-related hazards. A state-by-state ranking system will enable at-risk areas to be identified, so that adaptations and potential innovations can be suggested for these areas most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Role: PI

Various Bartram (PI) October 2013 US $141,628 registration

US $95,000 sponsorship

UNC 2013 Conference: Water and Health: Science Policy and Innovation. Chapel Hill, 14–18 October 2013. Five-day event attracting 493 participants from 47 countries. Two-day academic component attracted 424 abstracts of which 92 oral and 113 poster presentations were accepted. Three-day workshop component attracted 33 side event proposals of which 32 were accepted leading to workshop and networking events organized by 45 international collaborating organizations including 5 universities. Sponsorship received: Platinum level (US$25,000+): Wells Fargo; Gold level (US$15,000 to $24,999): FHI360, RTI; Silver level (US$7,000 to $14,999): IAPMO; Bronze level (US$3,000 to $6,999): Aquagenex, Collegiate Capital Management, Takata, Tomlinson Industries, Triangle Global Health Consortium, Triple Quest, Lifestraw, NSF International, Procleanse; Friends of Conference (US$1,000 to $2,999): ACS Publications, Plan USA, Sensus. Role: PI (Conference Director

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Wallace Genetic Foundation Bartram (PI) 11/2012 – 10/2013 US$32,216

Impacts of Climate-related Hazardous Events on Drinking Water and Sanitation Coverage (Part I and

Part II): This study engages a team of researchers to develop a novel methodology to determine the vulnerability and preparedness of global drinking water systems to climate-related hazardous events. Vulnerability assessments for all countries will be finalized for drinking water and these methods will also be applied to score and rank the vulnerability of global sanitation systems to climate change. Role: PI

DFID/University of Leeds Bartram and Evans (co-PIs) 12/2011 – 10/2013 GB£307,550.00 (£97,923 under

UNC management)

Public Health and Social Benefits of At-house Water Supplies: This study seeks to understand the benefits (both health and social) of at-house water supply in the developing world. This project comprises a literature review, analysis of available global data, and field studies with fieldwork data collection and analysis in Ghana (carried out by UNC), Vietnam (carried out by Leeds), and South Africa (carried out by UEA). Role: co-PI National Environmental Health Association (NEHA)/US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Bartram (PI)

9/2012 – 9/2013 US$154,151

Water Safety Planning: Impacts in Small Municipal and Private Water Supply Systems: This project will examine the applicability of the WSP process to the US context and its potential impacts. A team of researchers will explore and report on the feasibility of an exploratory project in North Carolina to identify the impacts of introducing Water Safety Plans in small municipal and private water supply systems. Role: PI Millennium Water Alliance/FEMSA Bartram (PI)

7/2013 – 9/2013 US$10,642

Enhancing Implementation Approaches: Hygiene Education and Promotion Programs & Social

Cohesion and Sustainability of WaSH Programs. Improving access to WaSH services, and its use and maintenance require more than providing WaSH technologies. A persistent challenge for WaSH practitioners is how to effectively implement, encourage adoption and maintenance of WaSH programs by an ecosystem of WaSH stakeholders. The Water Institute researchers explore whether social capital can contribute to the effectiveness of WaSH programs in terms of implementation, use, and maintenance. Three independent study design options for analyzing how social capital in several Latin American countries contributes to WaSH program effectiveness were produced. Lessons from this study are immediately applicable in WaSH program initiatives of FEMSA and Millennium Water Alliance. Role: PI US EPA Bartram (PI) 9/2012 – 9/2013 US$15,000

P3: A Decision-Making Tool for Water and Sanitation: Development of a decision-making support application (app) that will help managers in developing countries make informed and empowered selections of appropriate and sustainable WaSH technologies for communities Role: PI Millennium Water Association Bartram (PI) 12/2012 – 6/2013 US$17,976

Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (MEL) Framework for MWA-LAP: This project aims to operationalize a monitoring evaluation and learning (MEL) framework for the Millennium Water Alliance – Latin America Program (MWA-LAP) to improve WaSH programming through rigorous monitoring, data collection, and analysis to document lessons learned and best practices from the field. The team of researchers will assist MWA in executing the AKVO FLOW platform with six NGOs across five countries. Role: PI IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre Bartram (PI) 11/2012 – 5/2013 US $3,500

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Assessment of Cost-effectiveness of Hygiene: The WASHCost methodology to assess cost-effectiveness of hygiene interventions was tested using data provided by WASHCost for a combined water, sanitation, and hygiene intervention in Mozambique. Hygiene behaviour before and after the intervention was compared using indicators defined by the WASHCost team and was used to determine the effectiveness of an intervention. Cost data was provided for analysis and WASHCost's adaptation of the life cycle costs approach was used to determine a cost per person per year. Results indicated an improvement in hygiene behaviour, and thus hygiene effectiveness, for the WASHCost indicators tested, although improvements in behaviour did not correlate to a reduction in the incidence of diarrhea. The cost-effectiveness of the intervention could not be calculated due to the manner in which WASHCost defined 'effectiveness' (as percentage of households across four effectiveness levels). Role: PI IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre Bartram (PI) 12/2012 – 5/2013 US$12,000

Hygiene Effectiveness Levels and Intervention Costs: This project partnered with the IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre to conduct data analysis as part of the WASHCost program. The focus of the research was on examining connections between household water service level components in Mozambique within the framework of Life Cycle Cost Approach to provision of water and sanitation services. Specific analysis was conducted to compare quantity of water collected by rural villagers from improved sources, the distance from their household to the water source, and household characteristics of household size and the productive uses of water. Role: PI World Health Organization Bartram (PI) 11/2012 – 5/2013 US$14,850

GLAAS+: Revising the Current GLAAS Questionnaire and Methodology: The GLAAS global report provides information on WASH "inputs" such as enabling environment determinants, policy framework, human resources, and financing. These inputs provide insight into the efforts by countries and external agencies to improve and sustain WASH access. The existing GLAAS questionnaire was considered to be too long, with duplicative and sometimes irrelevant questions, and wording that was open to interpretation. The research team will produce a revised questionnaire with simplified language, a reference guide to help interpret questions and a focus on collecting a reduced number of questions that can be reliably answered, thus improving the quality of GLAAS data. Role: PI United Nations University (UNU/WIDER) Bartram (PI) 12/2012 – 5/2013 US$11,300

Foreign Aid-Research and Communication Programme’ (ReCom): The research team will provide an analysis of what works, or could work in aid-supported policy innovations and technologies aimed at improving safe drinking water and sanitation systems in low- and middle-income countries and the investment required to achieve and sustain global access. These levels of investment will be contrasted with reported levels of overseas development assistance. Countries which progressed well during the Millennium Development Goals will be investigated to see if aid and other factors have had a strong influence. Role: PI Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Bartram (PI) 2/2013 – 3/2013 US$20,000

Meeting of Senior Finance Ministry Officials to Discuss Decision-making for WaSH: The Water Institute and the Global Research Institute at the University of North Carolina (UNC) hosted senior government officials from six African countries (Nigeria, The Gambia, Sierra Leno, Uganda, Liberia, and South Sudan) at a one-day meeting to learn about decision-making in Ministries of Finance. The meeting was highly successful and provided insights into decision making within Finance Ministries that are already being made use of within the SWA partnership. Role: PI WaterAid Bartram (PI) 5/2012 – 12/2012 US$9,015

Monitoring Access to Drinking Water Beyond the Household: Review for JMP post 2015 Water

Working Group. This research aims to review norms and standards relating to non-household access to

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drinking water and identify potential indicators and data sources which could form a basis for enhanced monitoring at national and global levels. Country case studies are used to examine the feasibility of different approaches to monitoring access beyond household in low capacity settings in developing countries. Role: PI PATH and UNICEF Bartram (PI) 10/2011 – 11/2012 US$129,390

Identifying Barriers and Levers to Advancing HWTS to Scale: This study seeks to better understand the enabling environment for the scale-up and sustainability of household water treatment and safe storage (HWTS). Obstructing and enabling factors for HWTS are identified via interviews, focus groups, and online surveys and results will be used to develop an assessment tool that can identify locations amenable to high impact for HWTS. Role: PI UNICEF Bartram (PI) 4/2012 – 11/2012 US$58,673 Post-2015 global monitoring of urban water and sanitation: This study aims to review data availability and indicators used in global monitoring and propose a set of indicators to be used from 2015 and beyond to monitor progress in urban water supply and sanitation. Role: PI Various Bartram (Conference Director) October 2012 US$154,885 registration

US$80,500 sponsorship

UNC 2012 Conference: Water and Health: Science Policy and Innovation. Chapel Hill, 29 October–2 November 2012. Five day event attracting 508 participants from 44 countries. Two day academic component attracted 389 abstracts of which 96 oral and 120 poster presentations were accepted. Three day workshop component attracted 45 workshop proposals of which 36 were accepted leading to workshop and networking events organized by 53 international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Platinum level (US$25,000+): Wells Fargo; Gold level (US$15,000 to $24,999): IAPMO, RTI International; Silver level (US$7,500 to $14,999): P&G Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program; Bronze level (US$3,000 to $7,499): Amway, Catholic Relief Services, NSF, Pall Medical, Plan International USA, Tomlinson Industries, Triplequest, Water and Sanitation Rotarian Group (WASRAG); Friends of Conference (US$1,000 to $2,999): Environmental Science & Technology Journal, ProCleanse, Sensus, 300in6, Vestergard Frandsen. Role: PI (Conference Director) International Water Association (IWA) Bartram (PI) 10/2009 – 11/2010 US$37,108

Establishment of a Water Safety Plan Distance Learning Course. The Distance Learning Programme is being designed to offer skill and capacity building in global best practices to ensure consistent safety and acceptability of drinking water through Water Safety Plans; flexibility to study remotely; and professional recognition of enhanced expertise. Role: PI World Bank Bartram (PI) 2/2011 – 10/2012 $42,609

Greater Beirut Water Supply Project: Study on eutrophication, upstream management of water availability, and impact of climate change. This was a two part study that reviews water quality in the catchment, assesses water use in the basin, and makes suggestions for management under current and future usage and climate scenarios. Role: PI Bristol University Bartram (PI) 9/2009 – 9/2012 US$365,014

Aquatest: Scenarios of testing and regulatory framework. This study comprises two components. The first seeks to understand current water quality monitoring practices world-wide and to assess realistically-achievable changes to them in response to potential simplified testing methods and communications strategies. It includes scenario assessment and modeling of costs and benefits of alternatives. The second

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seeks to characterize regulatory approaches and monitoring requirements for microbial contaminants of drinking-water supply world-wide. Role: PI DEFRA (UK, Drinking Water Inspectorate) Bartram (PI) 5/2011 – 8/2012 US$89,503

Health Based Targets for Drinking-water Safety and Regulation: This research aims to collate, synthesize, interpret and add to the evidence on effective health based target setting in the context of preventive management of drinking-water safety and regulation implementation. Role: PI NIH/Fogarty International Center Bentley (PI) and Bartram (co-PI) 9/2010 – 8/2012 US$259,050

Water Wisdom: Developing Local-Global Capacities in Managing Water- This program engages post-doctoral investigators in interdisciplinary research to address information and decision making related to local, national and international water and sanitation (WatSan) programs. The conclusions of this research will establish new approaches for designing systems (institutional and technological) to provide accurate and timely information in the appropriate format to support improved WatSan policy making and program implementation. Role: Co-PI Wallace Genetic Bartram (PI) 7/2011 – 7/2012 US$25,000

Climate Change Impacts on Drinking Water and Sanitation Coverage. Determining Vulnerability and Preparedness: This research resulted in the first credible assessment of the vulnerability of drinking water access to climate-related hazards and a country-by-country scoring and ranking. Role: PI Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group Bartram (PI) 7/2011 – 7/2012 US$50,000

UNC-Wasrag Partnership for Sustained Water and Sanitation: This project developed, tested, and refined a preliminary community assessment and a monitoring and evaluation system for the planning teams to execute on the ground on Rotary WaSH projects. Role: PI Various Bartram (Conference co-Director) October 2011 US$67,000 sponsorship

(registrations managed by UNC Institute for the Environment)

UNC 2011 Conference Water and Health: Where Science Meets Policy. Chapel Hill, 3–7 October 2011, implemented in cooperation with Institute for the Environment. Five day event attracting 425 participants from 30 countries. Two day academic component attracted 300 abstracts of which 84 oral and 84 poster presentations were accepted. Three day workshop component included 25 workshop and networking events organized by 35 international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Gold level (US$8,000 to $14,999): Hilton, P&G Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program, Pfizer; Silver level (US$3,000 to $7,999): IAPMO; Bronze level (less than US$3,000): Neerman, ProCleanse LLC, Suez Environment/United Water, Water and Sanitation Rotarian Group (WASRAG), ACS Publications, FHI 360, Aquatest. Role: Co-PI (Conference co-Director) Health Canada Bartram (PI) 1/2011 – 3/2011 US$10,000

Water Safety Planning Tool Evaluation: Reviewed and provided comments and feedback on a Risk Database to support an international risk assessment tool for small community drinking water systems Role: PI UNEP Risoe Centre on Energy, Climate, and Sustainable Development

Bartram (PI)

8/2010 – 1/2011 US$30,000

UNEP/GEF Technology Needs Assessment Adaptation Technologies and Options: Provided technical

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and methodological expertise by creating a guidebook to provide countries with expert information on the most relevant adaptation technologies or practices for the water sector. Role: PI Various Bartram (Conference co-Director) October 2010 US$88,155 registration

US$34,500 sponsorship

UNC 2010 Conference Water and Health Where Science Meets Policy. Chapel Hill, 25–28 October 2010, implemented in cooperation with Institute for the Environment. Four day event attracting 350 participants from 41 countries. Two day academic component attracted 270 abstracts of which 53 oral and 66 poster presentations were accepted. Two day workshop component included 21 workshops organized by 12 international collaborating organizations. Sponsorship received: Gold level (US$10,000+): IAPMO, NSF International, P&G Children’s Safe Drinking Water; Silver level (US$5,000 to $9,999): American Water Works Association (AWWA); Bronze level (less than US$5,000): Academy for Educational Development (AED). Role: Co-PI (Conference co-Director) UNICEF Bartram and Whittington (co-PIs) 3/2010 – 08/2010 US$139,358

Water and Sanitation Service Sustainability: WASH and climate change country assessment; and reducing financial barriers to accessing WASH services. I am the task leader for the component ‘WASH and Climate Change: country-by-country assessment’. The objectives are to identify vulnerabilities and risks posed by climate change and to assess potential measures to increase resilience. Evidence gathered informs analysis of country-specific vulnerability assessment and formulation of plans to increase programming effectiveness and sustainability. Role: co-PI WaterAid Bartram (PI) 2/2010 – 5/2010 US$55,638

Institutional Arrangements for Sanitation: What can and should the health sector do? This study further advances ongoing work on development of indicators for health system functions in water and sanitation and on development of novel data collection tools. It includes data collection by multiple methods from four countries for to enable method validation. Role: PI UN World Water Assessment Programme Bartram (PI) 9/2010 – 12/2010 US$6,000

UN World Water Development Report 4 (WWDR4): The research involved drafting a report on Water and Health for the World Water Development 4. Although Water and Health were not designated as a challenge area in WWDR4, the report is similar to those for the challenge areas and includes 1) a brief description of the main issues facing the Water and Health area and how it has been changing over the past recent years, 2) the most important external drivers, resulting pressures and impacts they have on water resources and their uses and management, 3) the principal risks, uncertainties and opportunities related to the Water and Health issues, 4) identified geographic hotspots or sectoral issues and 5) examples of how some countries, communities, businesses etc. are dealing with these issues and challenges. The research also led to a set of guidelines that will allow the authors of the WWDR4 to incorporate Water and Health and Water Supply and Sanitation as cross-cutting issues in their analyses and the respective text. Role: PI IAPMO Bartram (PI) 1/2010 to present US$35,000

Standards in Drinking-water Supply Distance Learning Course: Development of a distance learning course with goals of increasing the understanding of how standards and codes are developed, maintained and evolve in USA and other selected countries. Role: PI World Health Organization Bartram (PI) 6/2009 – 10/2009 US$14,900

WHO Zoonoses – Final Workshop on Emerging Waterborne Infectious Disease: The Water Institute at UNC, on behalf of the WHO, hosted a 5-day international meeting of experts to discuss research efforts

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focused on understanding the impact of zoonotic microorganisms linked to waterborne disease in humans and identifying potential future disease threats. The resulting book provides information that will help agencies anticipate future waterborne disease [problems as well as determine whether existing practices are sufficient to protect human health or if new practices should be developed. Role: PI

Service to University and Profession – summary as of June 2015

Editorial service I was Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (JWaSHDev) from its inception until 2018. In this capacity I steered the development of the journal and served as managing editor for around 200 manuscripts.

I undertake around 10 manuscript reviews each year for journals other than JWaSHDev including Am J Trop Med Hyg, Bulletin of the World Health Organization, Clinical Infectious Disease, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Environmental Health, Environmental Health Perspectives, Environmental Research and Public Health, Epidemiology and Infection, Human Development and Capability, PLoS-Medicine, PLoS-One, Phil Trans R Soc A, Science, Science of the Total Environment, Tropical Medicine and International Health, Water, Water Policy, Water Science and Technology and Waterlines.

I serve on the editorial Boards of PLoSMed, the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Global Health Perspectives, the Journal of Water and Health.

Committees and advisory boards

Information on service on committees (committees of significant time duration) is included in my main CV, above.

I frequently provide one-off and short term advisory support to domestic and international organizations. Over the period 2009–2015 this included: Case Foundation, CDC, DfID, Government of Germany (BMZ and GTZ), IRC, Lancet, ODI, Suez-Environnement, UNICEF (several), WaterAid, WHO (several), WSSCC.

Invited presentations

A list of my invited presentations is included in my main CV, above.

Student advising Information on advising (of students) is included in my main CV, above.

Mentoring Information on my mentoring activities is included in my main CV, above.

Judgment of individual performance

I am frequently asked to provide comment on performance of individuals in the context of decisions about promotion or recruitment. In recent years I have provided 10–12 reviews and references annually, most frequently for academic promotion among tenure track academics and also for awards/prizes and employment (does not include references for current and former students).

I am asked to advise on senior recruitments a few times each year. Examples from 2009–15 include: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Korn/Ferry International, Egon Zehnder International (Management Consultants).

Grant proposals reviews;

I typically provide a small number of reviews of grant proposals each year. I typically provide a small number of institution and project reviews each year

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institutional and project reviews

(examples not listed for preservation of anonymity).