"background": "Municipal water systems are critical infrastructure for public health and agricultural productivity in sub-Saharan Africa. In Ghana, the methodological rigour of studies linking these systems to clinical outcomes through advanced statistical modelling is variable and has not been systematically appraised. ", "purpose and objectives": "This systematic review aims to critically evaluate the methodological application of multilevel regression analyses in studies assessing the impact of municipal water systems on clinical health outcomes within the Ghanaian context, with a focus on agricultural communities. ", "methodology": "A systematic search of multiple electronic databases was conducted following a pre-registered protocol. Eligible studies were those employing multilevel models to analyse clinical outcome data (e. g. , diarrhoeal incidence, parasitic infection) in relation to municipal water system characteristics in Ghana. Studies were assessed for methodological quality, model specification, and reporting transparency. ", "findings": "Of the 27 studies meeting inclusion criteria, a significant methodological gap was identified: 78% failed to account for clustering at the water-district level in their variance-covariance structures, potentially inflating Type I error. The most robust models, employing y{ij = \0j + \1x1ij + eij with \0j = \00 + \01Wj + u0j, consistently indicated a protective, though modest, effect of improved water pressure on childhood stunting (pooled odds ratio: 0. 85, 95% CI: 0. 72 to 0. 99). ", "conclusion": "The application of multilevel regression in this interdisciplinary field is often methodologically inconsistent, undermining the reliability of inference for policy. Where correctly specified, models provide evidence for a measurable, albeit limited, health benefit from specific engineering interventions. ", "recommendations": "Future research must prioritise correct hierarchical model specification, report robust standard errors, and integrate water quality data with agricultural practice variables. National monitoring frameworks should standard
Agyemang-Badu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.