Post #291,352
8/22/07 12:04:33 PM
|
Community Urinalysis
Researchers have figured out how to give an entire community a drug test using just a teaspoon of wastewater from a city's sewer plant.
The test wouldn't be used to finger any single person as a drug user. Sure it won't! Hey! Who's that digging up the sewer in front of my house? Oh, they're just putting on new "meters". Nothing to worry about. Have a nice day :) [link|http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/C/CITYWIDE_DRUG_TEST?SITE=TXDAM&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT|Full Story]
Smile, Amy
|
Post #291,424
8/23/07 7:23:37 PM
|
So many bio-active Pharmchem pills dumped in there now -
probably even the rats are developing new kinds of diseases. Better Living Through Chemistry ... for a while, then - -
|
Post #291,432
8/23/07 11:30:50 PM
|
Now what needs to be done . . .
. . is to recruit someone with access to all those not-so-well-secured stocks of beyond expiry pharmaceuticals and flush them massively in various communities. I propose such Republican bastions as Orange County CA and Arizona for starters.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
|
Post #291,437
8/24/07 12:11:58 AM
|
Evul Genius!
I think they are looking for the usual suspects like cocaine and pot. Still, the other meds oughta give 'em something to talk about.
Smile, Amy
|
Post #291,438
8/24/07 12:28:08 AM
|
Hey, the findings could provide the foundation for . . .
. . doctorial theses for decades to come, and could launch whole new government agencies to deal with the problem.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
|
Post #291,515
8/25/07 12:10:08 PM
|
The War on Expired Drugs! K3wl!
jb4 "It's hard for me, you know, living in this beautiful White House, to give you a firsthand assessment." — George W. Bush, when asked if he believed Iraq was in a state of civil war (Newsweek, 26 Feb 07)
|
Post #292,066
9/1/07 11:31:00 AM
|
Cecil weighs in, too.
[link|http://www.straightdope.com/columns/070831.html|The Straight Dope] - People take medications. They excrete them. What happens next? Could it affect the water supply?: [...]
And if you look closely enough, the residue is there all right. In the late 90s Swiss scientists found cholesterol drugs in their groundwater; when they started checking lakes and streams, they found the stuff almost everywhere. The United States Geological Survey measured levels of pharmaceuticals, hormones, and other pollutants in 139 streams across the U.S. in 1999 and 2000 \ufffd 80 percent of the time they found at least one of the 95 chemicals they were screening for. The medical compounds seen most regularly were steroids and nonprescription drugs, though sex hormones such as estrogen and testosterone turned up too; in a subsequent USGS study, hormones and steroids were detected in more than 40 percent of groundwater samples. German scientists have found antibiotics, beta blockers, and even antiepilepsy medicine in their water; in Canada researchers have found cancer drugs and anti-inflammatories; in the UK they\ufffdve found everything from ibuprofen to antibiotics in streams and sewage alike.
The good news is that we're talking about some very, very small quantities of drugs here \ufffd the levels found so far have typically been measured in parts per billion or even trillion. And after three decades of study, no one's yet produced any evidence that drug residue puts humans at risk. The less-good news runs a little longer. First, there may be long-term cumulative effects we haven\ufffdt identified yet, especially considering how persistent some residues are \ufffd clofibric acid, one by-product of a cholesterol drug, can hang around for two-plus decades. Second, the extremely low concentrations of residue in water make it hard to distinguish any such effects from ones caused by the zillion other chemicals we\ufffdre constantly exposed to. Then there\ufffds the ongoing boom in prescription drug use: a 2004 report points out that while the U.S. population grew 13 percent between 1993 and 2003, the amount of prescription drugs we bought went up 70 percent over the same period.
Another possible concern is that we don\ufffdt know how all these drugs may interact. Some studies have found that combining different sex hormones in doses so tiny as to be theoretically insignificant can have a measurable (if small) effect. According to one USGS fish pathologist, something like this may be going on with pollutants in tributaries of the Potomac River, where in testing last year more than 80 percent of male largemouth and smallmouth bass were found to be producing eggs, which isn\ufffdt normally part of their repertoire. Residue can also accumulate in the tissue of fish and other wildlife and get back to us via the food chain. Meanwhile, there\ufffds always the potential problem of unmetabolized antibiotics entering the environment and helping breed a new generation of super-resistant bacteria.
[...] The [link|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeopathy|homeopaths] must be having a field-day, eh? It sounds like attempting to trace contaminants in the water supply is a lost cause because the stuff is everywhere. Cheers, Scott.
|
Post #292,077
9/1/07 5:39:14 PM
|
I remember when my dad was on chemo
he got sick just outside the house...the grass there has never grown back. To lighten the mood, we used to joke that if he would just go pee around the yard edges, we would never have to weed eat again. I loved making my dad laugh.
Smile, Amy
|
Post #292,078
9/1/07 5:46:32 PM
|
:-)
|
Post #292,108
9/1/07 9:54:51 PM
|
well iffen you got beer and my next trip to texas :-)
Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari? Any opinions expressed by me are mine alone, posted from my home computer, on my own time as a free american and do not reflect the opinions of any person or company that I have had professional relations with in the past 51 years. meep
reach me at [link|mailto:bill.oxley@cox.net|mailto:bill.oxley@cox.net]
|
Post #292,115
9/1/07 11:49:53 PM
|
:-D
What? You have the Piss of Death too? What kind of beer do you be wantin'?
LMAO!
Smile, Amy
|
Post #292,126
9/2/07 9:57:23 AM
|
puzzle beer of course!
Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari? Any opinions expressed by me are mine alone, posted from my home computer, on my own time as a free american and do not reflect the opinions of any person or company that I have had professional relations with in the past 51 years. meep
reach me at [link|mailto:bill.oxley@cox.net|mailto:bill.oxley@cox.net]
|