New article on evidence and literature around COVID-19 and water demand
SCI Researcher Alison Browne has co-published the first paper of the Innovate UK Knowledge Transfer Partnership project with Artesia. The research was led by Joseph Cahill with Claire Hoolohan and Rob Lawson.

COVID-19 has had unprecedented impacts across the international community, with complex and far-reaching consequences. Measures to prevent transmission have led to substantial changes to everyday life, with lock-downs, stay-at-home orders and guidance lead.
This movement of activity has had profound impacts on daily practices, affecting the consumption of resources including water. Likewise, Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) practices and infrastructure are crucial tools for the management of disease. Therefore, this review seeks to assess the current literature on the impact of COVID-19 on domestic water use.
A web-based rapid evidence review was undertaken to assess and synthesize the theories, methods and empirical evidence emerging across a multidisciplinary body of research to understand how COVID-19 effects everyday water use. Key themes around increased water consumption and changing daily consumption patterns emerged.
There was a distinct lack of social science concepts and methodologies in use to understand changing water demand, and the methodological focus was largely quantitative. Key insights and reflections were lacking as a result; for example, there was little research on how the water-related practices, consumption, and demand patterns differed among households.
This article makes the case for further qualitative and mixed-method research using social theories, illustrating how social practice theories, as one example, contribute to understanding the dynamics of everyday life during the pandemic. Measures to prevent transmission have led to substantial changes to everyday life, with lock-downs, stay-at-home orders and guidance leading to an increase in people staying indoors
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