Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have published an interesting study that sheds light on the fate of a familiar pharmaceutical as it enters the waste stream. In work initially described last year, NIST chemists investigated probable chemical reactions involving acetaminophen when the drug is subjected to typical wastewater processing. Acetaminophen is the most widely used pain reliever in the United States, and a study of 139 streams by the U.S. Geological Survey found that it was one of the most frequently detected man-made chemicals.

The scientists found that the drug readily reacts in chlorine disinfection to form at least 11 new products, at least two of which are known to be toxic. The results, according to lead author Mary Bedner, demonstrate that environmental scientists need to be concerned about downstream reaction products as well as the original waste materials. “The issue is what you should be looking for in the environment,” she says. “When you are looking for the effects of pharmaceuticals in the environment, you need to ask what they’re going to turn into.”

Shouldn’t this sort of analysis be part of pre-production research by the manufacturer and the FDA?



  1. John says:

    Uh Hello Doesn’t tap water have chlorine in it????

  2. Rob says:

    LOL!!!

    That picture is from Samon swimming upstream to spawn and then dieing.

    Funny how a picture from one subject can help push another…

  3. Eideard says:

    Rob — all you got right was the species; though, it’s spelled salmon. These particular salmon died as a result of power dam mismanagement. Does that make them less dead? It’s another illustration of lousy stewardship.

  4. BOB G says:

    yes your tap water does have chlorine in it. plus a bunch of other goodys that we probebly have not tested to see what the do when mixed together. It is impossable to buy pure water most bottled comes with suffites and other stuff.


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