Pharmaceutical Disposal and Water Quality
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For purposes of water quality discussions, pharmaceuticals are
usually grouped with other chemicals found in water supplies and called
pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs). PPCPs are a diverse
group of chemicals that include; (1) products we ingest (or give to our
pets and domesticated animals) to improve health, which include
over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, pharmaceuticals (prescription medicines,
nutritional supplements, and veterinary drugs, (2) products we use to
adorn and clean ourselves, which include fragrances, lotions, shampoos,
antibacterial soaps, detergents, sunscreens, cosmetics, and, (3) other
chemicals used in various important applications, which include
pesticides, plasticizers, and brominated flame retardants.
All
of these chemicals are used by humans or given to animals and are
finding their way into our water supplies. The purpose of this fact
sheet is to explain the source of these chemicals, how they are getting
into our water supplies, and how each person should properly dispose of
unwanted or no-longer-needed PPCPs.
Unused and unwanted medicines being collected.
Ingested Health Care Products
Medicines are produced and used in very large volumes (see ohoto
above). Fifty percent of the population uses at least one prescription
drug daily and four out of five patients leave the doctor’s office with a
prescription. Almost 800 million prescription items were dispensed in
2007, 59.2 % more than in 1997. Worldwide, between 200 and 400 million
pounds of antibiotics are taken annually. Of this total over 50 million
pounds of antibiotics are taken in the United States annually with half
of these going to animals. It is estimated that hospitals and long-term
care facilities intentionally discard 250 million pounds of unused or
unwanted medicines each year. These PPCPs enter the environment by
excretion by humans and domestic animals and by flushing unneeded or
expired PPCPs down a toilet or drain. These PPCPs in the waste stream go
to the local municipal wastewater treatment plant or to your private
on-lot sewage system. Many people are surprised to learn that today’s
municipal water and wastewater treatment systems do not intentionally
remove these chemicals from the water and wastewater they treat,
although a considerable portion of these chemicals are removed in the
treatment processes. On-lot sewage systems, likewise do not
intentionally remove these chemicals though some PPCPs are adsorbed onto
the soil receiving the absorption field’s wastewater.
Adorning and Cleaning Products
Little is reported about the quantities of fragrances, lotions,
shampoos, antibacterial soaps, detergents, sunscreens, and cosmetics
used by the population. What we do know is that every time you take a
shower, you wash whatever of these products you use down the drain where
they enter the wastewater treatment or private on-lot sewage systems.
As with health care PPCPs, only limited quantities of these chemicals
are removed by today’s treatment systems. When you go swimming, these
products are washed directly into the surface waters.
Other Chemicals
Pesticides, plasticizers, brominated flame retardants, and other
similar products enter the environment by various pathways including
being placed in the soil, volatilizing into the atmosphere, and being
discharged into streams. In few cases is there any quality control or
deliberate treatment of these chemicals.
Why the Concern Now?
Until very recently chemical diagnostic technology was not able to
detect these chemicals in water because the concentrations were below
detectable limits. Now that it is possible to detect parts-per-trillion
(ppt) or nanograms per liter, we are frequently finding one or more of
these chemicals in our water. Even though these concentrations seem very
small and insignificant there are an extremely large number of
molecules of these products in the water we drink. The box below may
help you understand this concept.
What are the Current Conditions?
A USGS reconnaissance study (Kolpin et al. (2002) in 1999-2000, the
first of its kind, evaluated the presence of pharmaceuticals, hormones
and other organic contaminates in 139 streams in 30 states. They found
82 of 95 antibiotics, non-prescription drugs, steroids, and hormones in
at least one sample. Eighty percent of streams sampled had more than one
contaminant. Seventy-five percent had two or more. Fifty-four percent
had more than five, 34% had more than 10 contaminants, and 13% of
streams tested positive for more than 20 targeted contaminants.
In
a study (Velicu and Suri, 2008) that sampled 21 Chester County streams,
seven different estrogen compounds were detected in at least 10% of the
streams sampled and two of these compounds were found in more than 86%
of the streams sampled. The two estrogen compounds found in the highest
concentrations were estriol (0.33 to 19.7 ng/L) and progesterone (7.35
to 11.8 ng/L).
Acetaminophen, commonly known as Tylenol, is a much used over-the-counter drug. A common dose of Tylenol is 500 milligrams (mg). Acetaminophen has been detected in drinking water at concentrations of 0.00000005 mg/L. This concentration is equal to 0.00005 μg/L or 0.05 ng/L or 50 pg/L. 50 pg/L is equivalent to 50 grams of acetaminophen in one trillion liters of water. This is also equivalent to finding 48 billion (48,000,000,000) molecules of acetaminophen in a cup of water. So the next time you have your morning cup of coffee, consider what else is in that cup.
There is no doubt these chemicals are beginning to show up in
our drinking water supplies. The important question is “So what?” “Are
they really harmful to us?” There is not a great deal of credible
information to show that we humans are being affected, health wise, by
these very low concentrations of chemicals in our drinking water. There
is, however, growing evidence that some of these chemicals disrupt the
endocrine balance in various ecological species (endocrine disruptors)
and can adversely affect fish and other aquatic species living in the
contaminated waters. Some of these chemicals interfere with or mimic
natural hormones and disrupt reproduction, development, and behavior of
fish and other organisms. Feminization of male fish has been observed in
waters with estrogen concentrations in the 0.1 to 10 ng/L range. No one
knows at what concentrations similar impacts will be detected in humans
(the research has not been done).
How do Medicines and Drugs get into Our Water?
In the United States, most unused or unwanted medicines are either
flushed down the toilet (35%) or placed in the trash (54%). Many
pharmacies have appropriate drug disposal programs and procedures, but
less than 2% of unwanted medicines are returned to the pharmacy where
they were obtained. Over 7% of the population leaves unwanted medicines
in a cabinet for someone else to deal with later.
It is
relatively easy to understand how drugs that have been flushed down a
toilet could get into the water supply (Note the flow path from “your
home” to “my home” in Fig. 2). A major portion of these chemicals are
removed (some as high as 99.9%) by traditional wastewater treatment
plant processes but the accumulated effect of the chemicals that remain
in the effluent and are discharged into the receiving waters is
troublesome. Chimchirian et al. (2007) found that 41 to 99% of estrogen
compounds were removed from three traditional wastewater treatment
plants, with activated sludge plants showing the best removal. However,
estrogen compounds found in the treatment plant effluent were still
above the detectable limits, leaving daily estrogen loads (predominately
estrone) in the effluent ranging from 2 to 167 mg/d. Data from a
wastewater treatment plant that applies microfiltration followed by
reverse osmosis advanced treatment to a portion of their treated water
still shows detectable concentrations of many PPCPs in the effluent.
Treated wastewaters are usually discharged to local streams and flow
downstream to the next town where the water is treated before being
piped to your home.
Drugs
that are disposed of in the trash should be expected to be retained in a
landfill where the trash is deposited. However, much of the waste
deposited in landfills is organic and, over time, organic waste
decomposes and produces leachate. In modern, properly designed and
operated landfills, the landfill leachate is collected and treated; but
the treatment processes do not completely remove the PPCPs in the
leachate before being discharged to local surface waters.
PPCPs
in treated wastewater that is irrigated onto forest or cropland will
generally be captured in the soil profile where soil microbes and soil
chemical reactions will breakdown the PPCPs into quite harmless
products.
There is a far more subtle and maybe more important
pathway from a PPCP user to the water supply. When a doctor prescribes
medicine(s), you ingest these drugs. Your body uses some of the
prescribed drug for its designed purpose, but a majority of each drug is
excreted. So a large portion of prescribed and properly used
medications are automatically returned to the wastewater and then to our
receiving streams. Adorning and cleaning products enter our drinking
water by being washed into the wastewater and then into the receiving
streams.
Keep these Chemicals Out of the Water
Keeping PPCPs from our water supplies is almost impossible. Reducing
the use of these products is the only way to reduce the volume of these
products that reach our water supply. At this point, the technology does
not exist that will completely remove PPCPs from water.
Keeping
unused and unwanted health care products from our water supplies is
something each of us should give careful consideration. The only truly
safe way to dispose of these drugs is by high-temperature incineration.
These incineration sites are usually under the control of law
enforcement and all of the disposal suggestions below should eventually
lead to proper incineration.
The ONDCP (2007) prescription drug disposal guidelines advise you to:
- Flush prescription drugs down the toilet ONLY if the label specifically instructs doing so.
- Dispose of unused prescription drugs through pharmaceutical take-back programs if available.
- If these methods are not available or appropriate:
- Take unused, unneeded, or expired prescription drugs out of their original containers.
- Mix the drugs with an undesirable substance, such as kitty litter.
- Put the drugs in sturdy, opaque, non-descript containers.
- Throw these containers in the trash.
The American Pharmacists Association, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Pennsylvania Department of State (DOS, 2009) all recommend the following:
- Do not flush unused medications.
- Ask your pharmacist about take-back programs.
- When tossing unused medications, protect children and pets from the potentially negative effects by:
- Crush or dissolve solid medications.
- Mix with kitty litter or a solid kitchen substance.
- Place in a sealed plastic bag to reduce the poisoning risk.
- Remove and destroy ALL identifying personal information.
- Check for approved state or local collection programs or with area hazardous waste facilities.
Summary
Proper management and disposal of pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) requires that each of us to take precautions to make sure that these unused and unwanted products do not reach and enter the waters that become our drinking water. Because it is impossible to detect these chemicals until the water contains billions of molecules, it is imperative that every possible action be taken to keep these chemicals out of our drinking water.
Short fact sheet on the issue of pharmaceuticals in water and how to properly dispose of these products to prevent water quality contamination.



