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. 2011 Aug;101(8):1370–1379. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2011.300142

TABLE 1.

Barriers to and Strategies for Increasing Water Access and Intake in School and Child Care Settings

Barrier
Strategy
Poor drinking water quality Contaminants (lead, arsenic) Increase the availability of safe, palatable drinking water Train personnel about drinking water quality issues
Poor taste (warm, unpalatable) Test drinking water for contaminants
Poor appearance (discolored) Develop an action plan for removing contaminants and provide alternate water sources if they exist
Publicize testing/remediation efforts to parents, personnel, and students
Provide more appealing forms of water (e.g., filtered, refrigerated, flavored with fruit slices)
Costs to increase access to safe, palatable drinking water Cost associated with drinking water testing Seek funding for school water-related programs Seek federal, state, or municipal funding (e.g., bonds, school district funds)
Repair and maintenance costs (e.g., old drinking water–related infrastructure) Apply for foundation grants (e.g., Freddie Mac foundation, 3M Community Giving)
Cost for removal of drinking water contaminants Partner with private industry (e.g., reusable water bottle companies, filter manufacturers)
Labor costs to maintain water sources
Student, parent, and personnel preferences for beverages other than tap water Increased preferences for sugary beverages Improve student, parent, and personnel preferences for tap water Provide palatable drinking water (e.g., cold, filtered, fruit flavored)
Decreased preference for tap water owing to the taste, convenience, and perceived quality of bottled water Set hygiene and maintenance standards for drinking water outlets
Implement multimedia educational campaigns
Encourage parents and school/child care personnel to model drinking tap water