Assessing tap water awareness: The development of an empirically-based framework

Brouwer, Stijn and van Aalderen, Nicolien and Koop, Steven Hendrik Andreas and Englehardt, James D. (2021) Assessing tap water awareness: The development of an empirically-based framework. PLOS ONE, 16 (10). e0259233. ISSN 1932-6203

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Abstract

Despite the often emphasized importance of water awareness, and notwithstanding the fact that calls for increasing public awareness are becoming commonplace, most studies do not define the concept, let alone operationalise it into measurable units. This is, however, essential to measure and evaluate efforts related to water awareness such as public campaigns, customer communication and behavioural interventions. To address this gap, we conceptualise, operationalise and assess tap water awareness, hereby differentiating between cognitive awareness (head), affectional awareness (heart), and behavioural awareness (hands). In parallel, we also differentiate between tap water quality, quantity and system. By building on a variety of contemporary conceptual insights in literature and a series of expert interviews, an assessment framework is developed. A cohesive set of nine awareness components are identified and operationalised into a set of tangible questions which are put to the test in a large-scale online survey (n = 1003) in the Netherlands, applying both a traditional and modern segmentation approach based on four types of perspectives (‘quality & health concerned’, ‘aware & committed’, ‘egalitarian & solidary’, and ‘down to earth & confident’). Based on the analysis of the results of the first empirical application of our tap water awareness assessment framework, we conclude that—with a score 53.5 points out of 100—tap water awareness in the Netherlands shows ample room for improvement. Interestingly, most significant variations in awareness are generally not related to sociodemographic factors but rather apply to the four customer perspectives on drinking water that are based on people’s subjective views and preferences.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Universal Eprints > Geological Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 13 Feb 2023 07:16
Last Modified: 13 Mar 2024 03:57
URI: http://journal.article2publish.com/id/eprint/645

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