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Pharmaceuticals May Not Pose Major Aquatic Environmental Risks

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by Staff Writers
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Jul 17, 2006
A Canadian study of high-use drugs released from eight sewage treatment plants indicates that effects on invertebrates, bacteria, and plants in the aquatic receiving environment are unlikely. The study is published in the latest issue of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

The pharmaceutical market is a booming industry. The manufacture of drugs is increasing to match its demand and use worldwide. In Canada alone, approximately 24,000 products, including human pharmaceutical and biological drugs, veterinary drugs, and disinfectants, are registered on Health Canada's Drug Product Database.

None of these pharmaceuticals is absorbed entirely by the body; they often leave through urine and fecal matter. Then, domestic waste streams carry the excreted drugs to municipal wastewater treatment plants, private septic systems, or receiving water without treatment.

Though sewage treatment plants can remove or degrade some of the drug compounds, many drugs and by-products are not removed effectively. Hence the major source of pharmaceuticals in the aquatic environment is from sewage treatment plants.

Across Atlantic Canada, the study's researchers found ten acidic and two neutral pharmaceuticals in the effluents of eight sewage treatment plants. In the large bodies of receiving water, drugs generally were not detected at significant concentrations.

However, in the small receiving streams, drug residues continued downstream for 17 km. Based on the results of laboratory toxicity tests, the researchers concluded that the concentrations measured were not causing harm.

Pharmaceutically Active Compounds in Atlantic Canadian Sewage Treatment Plant Effluents and Receiving Waters, and Potential for Environmental Effects as Measured by Acute and Chronic Aquatic Toxicity; Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry], 2006; Vol. 25(8): 2163-2176

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Related Links
Pharmaceutically Active Compounds in Atlantic Canadian Sewage Treatment Plants
Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up



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Too Little Data Available to Assess Risk of Sludge
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Jul 17, 2006
Tens of thousands of organic chemicals from homes, farms, industries, medical facilities, street runoff and businesses are treated in waste-water treatment plants. The resulting sludge, rich in organic matter and nutrients but also potentially containing toxic metals, pathogens and pollutants, often is applied to land to amend soil.







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