Many reports have recently appeared about pharmaceutical contamination of water supplies, rivers, lakes and other waterways, but spokespersons from the drug and chemical industries have denied that this pollution poses any risk whatsoever to the environment. But a new report, issued directly from President's Cancer Panel , provides a stunning indictment of the dangers associated with pharmaceutical pollution.
- Enjoy this article? Help vote it up the 'Vine.
- Public Discussion (3)
The Author Points Out:
According to a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) study conducted back in 2002, antidepressants, blood pressure and diabetes medications, anticonvulsants, oral contraceptives, hormone replacement therapy drugs, chemotherapy drugs, antibiotics, heart medications and even codeine are all showing up in the water supplies of American cities. This study was the first national-scale evaluation of pharmaceutical drug contamination in streams, and roughly 80 percent of the streams tested were found to be contaminated as well.
In 2008, an AP investigation found that at least 46 million Americans are drinking water contaminated with trace amounts of pharmaceuticals. Even though every city tested has its water treated and "purified" prior to being delivered to the public, trace amounts of pharmaceutical drugs are making their way through to the tap. (Since not all major metropolitan areas were tested, the number of people affected is likely far higher than what was reported by AP.)
In spite of all this, water quality reports don't disclose the levels of pharmaceuticals found in tap water. Since the EPA and FDA have failed to establish any proper guidelines for drug contamination in water, most people have no idea that their water contains a dangerous cocktail of prescription medications.
- 2 votes
This has actually been known since the early 1990's.
It is why we will be going to war over water in the next 50 years.
Won't get fooled again in 2010!
- 2 votes
Old news, but the fight will go on, as long as the industries involved can delay governmental action.
- 2 votes
You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead. |



