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In the News…
Public Health and Drinking Water News Briefs
| March 21,
2008 |
| More Testing for Drugs in Water Sought |
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A recent five-month-long inquiry by the Associated Press National
Investigative Team found trace levels of numerous pharmaceuticals,
including antibiotics, anti-convulsants, mood stabilizers and sex
hormones, in the drinking water supplies of at least 41 million
Americans. The AP notes that communities are not required to test
for the presence of drugs in drinking water, and those that do often
do not share the results with customers.
As part of its effort, members of the AP National Investigative Team surveyed 62 metropolitan areas and 52 smaller cities, reporting on positive test results in drinking water supplies in 24 major cities. Tests were also conducted in the watersheds of 35 major providers, detecting pharmaceuticals in 28. In addition, the AP reviewed hundreds of scientific reports, analyzed federal drinking water databases, visited environmental study site and treatment plants and interviewed more than 230 officials, academics and scientists.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has noted that previous
studies have detected pharmaceuticals and person care products (PPCPs)
in water supplies. According to the Agency, "To date, scientists
have found no evidence of adverse human health effects from PPCPs
in the environment."
Following the release of the AP study, Senate hearings have
been scheduled and there have been calls for federal solutions including
the EPA to expand the list of contaminants that utilities are required
to test for. Pharmaceutical industry officials also announced
they would launch a new initiative with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service focused on telling Americans how to safely dispose of unused
medications. This inquiry, however, demonstrated the advancements
and increasing ability of the technology to detect substances at
these trace levels.
For more information, please visit:
More Testing for Drugs in Water Sought
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| Baghdad Residents' Health at Risk for Lack of Water, Sewage Systems |
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Lack of security, corruption, limited electricity, a shortage of
safe drinking water and rundown sanitation and sewage systems are
causing diseases and frustrations in Baghdad. Currently, sixty-five
percent of Iraqis having no access to piped drinking water and nearly
seventy-five percent with no access to a good sewage system.
The daily need for drinking water for Baghdad's residents is at least 3.25 million cubic meters, while the actual amount piped daily is about 2 million m3 per day. According to Baghdad's water directorate, there is an "acute crisis of drinking water as most of the water pipelines are outdated, having seen more than 30 years of services and some families, especially in suburban areas, depend on cisterns that only bring them contaminated underground water."
Of Baghdad's three sewage plants, one is out of action, another
is working at below capacity, while a pipe blockage in the third
means sewage is forming a huge lake, according to the civilian spokesman
of the Baghdad Security Plan. Baghdad's Health Directorate states
that at least 200-250 cases of waterborne diseases are being treated
each week in the capital's hospitals.
A report issued last summer by the relief agency Oxfam and the
Non-Governmental Organization Coordination Committee network in
Iraq said that about seventy percent of Iraqis were without adequate
water supplies, up from fifty percent in 2003. That includes over
two million people who have been displaced inside Iraq by the fighting,
which has forced many to live in unsanitary conditions where sewage
can infest food and water and easily spread cholera and other water-borne
diseases.
For more information, please visit:
Baghdad Residents' Health at Risk for Lack of Water, Sewage Systems
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| World's Sanitation Goals Slip |
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A 2007 scorecard shows the United Nation's goal of improving
sanitation by 2015 is likely to be missed by 600 million people
worldwide if current trends continue. Despite progress in nations
such as China, only 3 in 10 people now have a connection to a public
sewerage system, as proper sewers, with pipelines and treatment
plants, are prohibitively costly for many nations.
Earlier this month, the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) said that more than five billion people -
or sixty-seven percent of the world's population - are expected
to be without a connection to public sewerage in 2030. That is up
by 1.1 billion from 2000, when seventy-one percent of a smaller
world population had no connection.
Experts say a part of the solution, especially to cut water-borne
diseases for the rural poor, may lie in renewed and smarter exploitation
of nature - for example through plants or soil bacteria that feed
on waste. According to U.N. Environment Program (UNEP) "about
90 percent of the sewage and 70 percent of the industrial waste
in developing countries are being discharged untreated into water
courses…understanding the ability of peat lands, or marshes, or
wetlands, to play an integral part in filtering could help." Additionally,
a better understanding of the natural water cycle, under threat
from climate change stoked by human use of fossil fuels, is needed
to help manage water from "rains to drains." Experts note that global
warming may aggravate water shortages for hundreds of millions of
people, for instance, by disrupting Africa's monsoons or by thawing
Himalayan glaciers whose seasonal meltwater now feeds crops from
China to India.
For more information, please visit:
World's Sanitation Goals Slip
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| National Group Launches "Your Water. Your Decision" Campaign |
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The Source Water Collaborative (SWC) is launching the "Your
Water. Your Decision." Campaign to help local decision-makers take
advantage of opportunities to protect sources of drinking water,
understand the costs involved and consider ways to pay for it.
The SWC, a group of 16 national organizations and three federal
agencies including EPA, was formed with the joint signing of a vision
statement in February 2006 to further the goal of protecting sources
of drinking water.
As part of this initiative, the SWC has developed a guide for
community leaders and a toolkit for using the guide. The "Your
Water. Your Decision." guide is intended as a quick source of key
information on local options for protecting drinking water, including
development, stewardship and budgeting. Using the theme, "how you
govern can determine what you drink," the guide was developed as
a tool to enable local officials to take action within their communities
and with neighboring communities.
For more information, please visit:
National Group Launches "Your Water. Your Decision." Campaign
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In The News-is
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