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Pharmaceutical drug contamination of waterways threatens life on our planet
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(NaturalNews)
The President's Cancer Panel
(PCP) recently released its yearly report to the President outlining the status
of cancer in America. This year's report focuses primarily on
environmental factors that contribute to cancer risk. According to the
report, pharmaceutical drugs are a serious environmental pollutant,
particularly in the way they continue to contaminate waterways across
the country (and the world).
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 this report, issued directly from PCP, provides a
stunning indictment of the dangers associated with pharmaceutical
pollution.
The executive summary of the PCP report includes the
following statements:
"[P]harmaceuticals have become a
considerable source of environmental contamination. Drugs of all types
enter the water supply when they are excreted or improperly disposed of;
the health impact of long-term exposure to varying mixtures of these
compounds is unknown."
It's important to note that PCP is
required by law to assess the National Cancer Program and offer a
truthful evaluation of the various things it finds to be responsible for
causing cancer. The panel is a division of the National Cancer
Institute itself, so its findings hold fairly considerable weight in the
scientific world (or they should, if the reaction wasn't so
politicized).
The report itself is quite extensive, evaluating
everything from the environmental and health impacts of drug and
pesticide pollution to cell phone radiation and nuclear testing residue.
But the section on pharmaceutical drugs is especially interesting when
considering the fact that numerous reports have shown that drugs and
drug residue that ends up in water supplies typically isn't filtered out
by municipal treatment plants.
No laws exist to protect the
public from pharmaceuticals
Many chemicals are highly regulated
because they are known to negatively affect human and environmental
health. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is tasked with
regulating exposure to these chemicals, but pharmaceuticals are not
included in its regulatory scheme. Despite years of prodding by
environmental scientists, the EPA has given very little attention to the
dangers posed by widespread pharmaceutical contamination.
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.
Hospitals, consumers and drug
companies are all responsibleNone of this is surprising if you
consider that unused and expired drugs cannot be legally returned to the
pharmacies where they were purchased. Many people just flush them down
the toilet because the drug labels actually encourage patients to
dispose of them this way (and they probably don't know what else to do
with them).
People who take prescription and over-the-counter
drugs will excrete them as well, contributing to the drug overload being
found at wastewater treatment plants. (Drugs are not necessarily
"broken down" by your digestive system.)
It is also regular
protocol for hospitals to flush millions of pounds of unused
medications every year, a practice that contributes significantly to
water contamination.
And let's not forget the drug companies
that dump large amounts of their own pharmaceuticals into water
supplies. The same AP investigation found that more than 270 million
pounds of pharmaceutical compound residue is dumped every year into
waterways nationwide, many of which serve as drinking water for millions
of people.
The U.S. isn't the only place where Big Pharma is
dumping its waste, either. In 2009, researchers found that India's rivers are full of dangerous pharmaceuticals,
too.
One Indian river where 90 different pharmaceutical
companies dump their waste tested positive for over 21 active drug
ingredients. In one river alone, there was enough ciprofloxacin (a
strong antibiotic) being dumped every day by drug companies to treat
90,000 people! (And scientists detected this in water that was
supposedly purified by the drug companies before being released into the
environment).
The drug contamination levels found in India's
rivers were 150 times the detected levels found in the U.S. These
findings prove that drug companies couldn't care less how much drug
residue they dump in water as long as they can get away with it. They
don't even believe that pharmaceutical contamination is a threat to the
environment.
"Based on what we now know, I would say we find
there's little or no risk from pharmaceuticals in the environment to
human health," explained microbiologist Thomas White, a consultant for
the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, in a Dallas Morning News article about the AP
investigation. This is similar to BP's CEO saying, after the Deepwater
Horizon explosion, that the amount of oil gushing into the Gulf of
Mexico was "tiny" compared to how big the ocean is.
Studies
show drug residue cocktails actually do cause harmThough the
chemical and drug industries deny any danger from exposure to drug
residue in the water, science (and common sense) says otherwise.
A
2006
study conducted by researchers from the University of Insubria in Italy
simulated drug-tainted water by creating a low-level mixture of various
drug residues and testing it on embryonic cells. They discovered that,
even at low doses, the drug residues actually stopped cells from
reproducing.
Even though current water contamination levels are
measured in parts per million or parts per billion, there is no way to
know just how much exposure people are actually experiencing. People
drink contaminated water, shower in contaminated water and cook with
contaminated water, so it's illogical to suggest that there's no harm
being caused by widespread exposure, even at "low" doses, especially
when the exposure is a combination of dozens of different drugs
that have never been tested in combination.
People are not the
only beings that are affected by pharmaceutical contamination, either.
The world's aquatic ecosystems (and the plants and animals that belong
to them) are all being negatively impacted.
Drugs are being
found in fishAccording to an MSNBC
report back in 2009, all kinds of drugs are being found in the
bodies of fish near major U.S. cities. Researchers found drugs for high
cholesterol, allergies, high blood pressure, bipolar disorder and
depression in the livers and tissue of fish.
Researchers are in
agreement that aquatic species of all types are being harmed by
continuous exposure to water contaminated with pharmaceuticals. Even
though wastewater is treated in the U.S. before entering waterways, most
treatment facilities do not have the proper filtering technology to
remove dangerous drug residues from wastewater before it gets dumped.
Many
fish are experiencing reproductive problems as a result of exposure, as
is explained in the following report: (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23504633/)
Beyond
having their sperm damaged, some fish are actually changing sexes.
Males are becoming females and females are becoming males as a result of
drug exposure in the water. Other water creatures are experiencing
things like organ failure and the inability to grow. It makes a
reasonable person ask "How long until these effects start to hit
humans?"
Or have they already?
"We have no reason to think
that this is a unique situation. We find pretty much anywhere we look,
these compounds are ubiquitous," explained Erik Orsak, an environmental
contaminants specialist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in
response to the findings.
And it's not just near American cities
where fish are turning up with all kinds of drugs in their bodies. As of
2008, more than 100 different pharmaceutical compounds have been
detected around the world, affecting fish and wildlife everywhere. These
are chemicals that simply do not belong in our environment. And yet
they are there, dumped into our waters by the pharmaceutical industry
and its hospitals, pharmacies and consumers.
Why we need more
research on the toxicity of pharmaceutical contaminantsMany animal
studies have been or are being conducted on pharmaceutical exposure,
and they are indicating that these drugs are causing widespread harm.
But very few official human trials have been conducted, prompting many
to push for increased efforts.
If drug residue is building up in
animals and wildlife, then of course it's building up in humans as well,
posing the risk of significant harm. Reproductive failure, thyroid
dysfunction, cancer, osteoporosis -- all of these diseases and more may
be caused, at least in part, by prolonged exposure to low levels of all
sorts of drugs in the water supply.
Many states pushing for
drug waste legislationBecause the truth about drug contamination in
water is no longer a secret, many states have begun enacting
legislation to regulate drug disposal. Last August, Illinois passed the Safe Pharmaceuticals Disposal Act,
which restricts hospitals from flushing drugs down the drain.
California
has a similar law in place, and New York is working on one as well,
according to a recent report: (http://www.westfaironline.com/hudso...)
The
same report indicates that there have been five bills introduced to
regulate drugs at the federal level.
While this addresses the
hospital waste problem, there's still the human and drug company waste
problems. No matter how you look at it, pharmaceutical drugs are going
to continue making their way into the water supplies because they
will pass through the bodies of consumers first!
Drug
companies must be held responsible for their wastewaterSince it's
already been revealed that drug companies are failing to properly treat
their wastewater before dumping it into rivers (even though they claim
to be treating it), U.S. regulatory agencies need to step up and correct
the problem. Regular monitoring of wastewater contaminant levels is the
only way to halt the chemical contamination of waterways.
And if
U.S. companies are polluting water supplies in other countries (such as
India), they should be held accountable for their actions. There's no
excuse for U.S. companies to pollute anywhere in the world just because
they're operating outside domestic borders.
Wastewater
treatment plants should be retrofittedState and local legislators
would do well to put forth their own legislation to upgrade wastewater
treatment facilities so they can properly filter out pharmaceuticals
(and dispose of them safely). Since there's no way to stop human
elimination of pharmaceuticals (apart from slowly educating the masses
to stop swallowing dangerous pharmaceuticals), municipalities need to do
their part to prevent these dangerous toxins from getting into water
supplies in the first place.
Together, these measures would help
to drastically reduce the amount of pharmaceutical waste entering our
environment.
It's the environment, stupid!The careless
disposal of toxic pharmaceuticals is proving to be highly destructive,
despite reassurances by some that it's not that big of a deal. The
health of the planet and all of its amazing biodiversity is now
threatened by the steady poisoning of toxic chemical pharmaceuticals.
And
it's not just pharmaceuticals, either. Chemical byproducts and waste
from many different industries are polluting our environment at
unprecedented rates. Mercury (from dental fillings), fluoride (dripped
into the public water supply on purpose, if you can believe
that!), and all sorts of other chemicals and heavy metals are showing up
in food, water and the global environment.
Haven't we poisoned
our planet enough already?
Plants, animals and even humans can
only take so much of this. That's why we need to keep fighting against
the corporations that are causing this harm and force them to stop
destroying the world in which we hope to raise our children.
After
all, if we keep poisoning the planet at this rate, there won't be much
left to offer future generations except a toxic stew of patent-protected
chemicals that all the corporations pretend pose no problem at all.
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