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April
2002
USGS study says country's rivers awash in beauty aids,
medications
U.S. Water News Online
WASHINGTON -- A government analysis shows the nation's waterways are awash
in traces of chemicals used in beauty aids, medications, cleaners and
foods.
Among the substances: caffeine, contraceptives, painkillers, insect repellent,
perfumes and nicotine.
Scientists say that the problem is that these substances largely escape
regulation and defy municipal wastewater treatment. And the long-term
effects of exposure are unclear, they say.
The compounds are sold on supermarket shelves and found in virtually every
medicine cabinet and broom closet, as well as farms and factories. And
they are flushed or rinsed down the drain every day. But they do not disappear,
researchers warn.
Hydrologists
with the U.S. Geological Survey tested water samples in 30 states for
95 common compounds, an emerging class of contaminants known as pharmaceutical
and personal care pollutants, or PPCPS.
The scientists found that the chemicals persist in the environment in
concentrations as low as one part per billion or less. The results mirror
similar studies of PPCPs in Europe and Canada.
Yet little is known about PPCPs' potential health and environmental effects.
The use and disposal of 81 of the 95 compounds in the study are entirely
unregulated, officials said.
"Compounds that we use in households or even consume can persist
though wastewater treatment and affect resources on a pretty broad scale,"
said Herb Buxton, USGS coordinator of the USGS toxic substances hydrology
program.
For example, many scientists suspect the widespread use of anti-bacterial
agents in human medicines, household cleaners and veterinary medicines
has encouraged the development of germs that are resistant to antibiotics.
The
USGS study found at least 31 antibiotics and anti-bacterial compounds
in water samples. The study also tallied traces of at least 11 compounds
linked to birth control and hormone supplements.
Some studies have linked environmental exposure to hormones to deformed
sex organs in wildlife, sex reversal in some fish and declining fertility
in humans, as well as cancers and other diseases.
Scientists who did not participate in the USGS survey said PPCPs represent
the "next big unknown" in environmental contamination. Exposure
to even tiny amounts may result in cumulative risks, they said, especially
when the compounds combine in unanticipated ways.
"You don't need therapeutic doses of a drug to have an effect,"
said Christian Daughton of the Environmental Protection Agency's exposure
research laboratory in Las Vegas. "Some organisms have potential
to suffer multigenerational exposures. Parts per billion could have profound
effects."
Industry and water utility officials said they expect the EPA to decide
in the next few years how to regulate PPCPs. They said promising new wastewater
treatment technologies can break down many of the chemicals using biological
methods, or even exposure to ultraviolet light.
"We're not ignoring it," said Alan Roberson, regulatory affairs
director for the American Water Works Association in Washington. "One
question is what do you do with the concentrated form of these chemical
compounds if you take them out of the water."
In 1999-2000, USGS scientists collected samples downstream from cities,
farms and factories. Many of the waterways contribute to municipal water
supplies.
They included the Sacramento River at Freeport, Calif.; the South Platte
River in Denver; the Mississippi River above Minneapolis/St. Paul; and
the Charles River in Boston. Seven or more chemicals were found in half
of the streams sampled.
In
addition to caffeine, the USGS reported the most frequently detected compounds
were coprostanol and cholesterol, which are byproducts of digestion. Also
found frequently was DEET, a common insect repellent. Among the medications
found were the blood thinner warfarin, antidepressants and blood-pressure
medicine.
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