The application allows people to track water quality tests at any given water source over time, providing instant results which are put in context with other tests.
The app, which is available in the Google Play Store, also allows users to leave notes for other users about the appearance of the water, its scent, and how the water is flowing from the source, building up an archive of information over time.
A photograph of the water source can be uploaded and location details are registered automatically using a GPS reading from the mobile device.
U.N. Habitat funded a study in Tanzania to test mWater's capacity to provide local health officers with a simple way to see the quality of water using a mobile phone with an Android operating system.
"It's a very novel approach to water quality monitoring," said Lars Onsager Stordal, who works for U.N. Habitat's water, sanitation and infrastructure department. "It makes it possible, affordable and manageable at the local level."
Health workers can use the data or even go with a sick patient and easily test the water where they live.
"Anybody can look at it and see what's going on to see if anyone else might get infected," Feighery said. "When fecal contamination occurs somewhere it is the first precursor of disease in water systems. Before cholera spreads there's usually some failure in the sanitation system."
Giving poor people proper access to safe water and sanitation would save 2.5 million people a year from dying from diarrhoea and other diseases spread by a lack of hygiene, according to the charity WaterAid.
Next, Feighery will be working with U.N. Habitat and Rwanda's ministry of health to help equip health workers to use mWater.
(AlertNet is run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Visit www.trust.org/alertnet)
(Editing by Patricia Reaney)
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