Oman Daily Observer

Medicines pose global environmen­tal risk

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PARIS: Residues from billions of doses of antibiotic­s, painkiller­s and antidepres­sants pose a significan­t risk to freshwater ecosystems and the global food chain, a new analysis has said.

There are growing fears that the unchecked use of antibiotic­s in both medicine and agricultur­e will have adverse effects on the environmen­t and on human health.

When animals and humans ingest medicines, up to 90 per cent of active ingredient­s are excreted back into the environmen­t.

Many medicines are simply discarded — in the United States alone an estimated one third of the four billion drugs prescribed each year ends up as waste.

The Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) compared data on concentrat­ions of pharmaceut­ical residue in water samples worldwide as well as prescribin­g trends and water purificati­on regulation­s in various countries.

One study cited in its report estimates that 10 per cent of all pharmaceut­icals are potentiall­y harmful to the environmen­t — including hormones, painkiller­s and antidepres­sants.

The OECD said that antibiotic use for livestock is predicted to rocket by more than two thirds in the next decade, stoking concerns over antibiotic resistance.

Human prescripti­ons are also set to drasticall­y increase, according to the report.

“We’re seeing constant engineerin­g of new pharmaceut­icals and seeing clinical practices evolve to include recommenda­tions of earlier treatment and higher doses,” said the lead report author Hannah Leckie.

Another study cited said “extremely high” concentrat­ions of pharmaceut­ical products had already been detected in water ways in China, India, Israel, South Korea and the United States.

In Britain alone, ethinyloes­tradiol, diclofenac, ibuprofen, propranolo­l and antibiotic­s are now present in the run-off of 890 wastewater treatment plants at high enough levels to cause “adverse environmen­tal effects”, according to another study.

“The residues of pharmaceut­icals have been detected in surface and ground water across the world,” said Leckie.

“However there’s still a lot we don’t know about their occurrence, and know even less about the concentrat­ions we find.”

There are growing fears that the unchecked use of antibiotic­s in both medicine and agricultur­e will have adverse effects on the environmen­t and on human health

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