Toronto Star

Cocaine, other drugs found in Ontario water

McGill study found traces of substances in drinking water that could harm environmen­t

- JILLIAN KESTLER-D’AMOURS STAFF REPORTER

Trace amounts of cocaine, oxycodone and morphine, among other illicit and prescripti­on drugs, have been detected in surface water in southern Ontario rivers, a new study says.

The drugs originate in wastewater discharged into the Grand River watershed, according to a McGill Uni- versity report published last week in the journal Environmen­tal Toxicology and Chemistry. Limited quantities of certain drugs also remained in Ontario’s drinking water, even after passing through a drinking water treatment plant, researcher­s said.

“If the wastewater treatment plant, which is kind of an intense treatment that we do to remove these contaminan­ts, is not able to remove fully the compound, we shouldn’t expect the environmen­t to remove it fully,” said Viviane Yargeau, a chemical engineerin­g professor at McGill and one of the study’s authors.

A total of 17 substances were observed in small quantities in the wastewater, including cocaine, amphetamin­es, opioid drugs and metabolite­s. Researcher­s said cocaine, ephedrine and prescripti­on opioids were also not effectivel­y removed at the drinking water treatment plant.

Yargeau told the Star that while the drugs do not pose a serious health risk to humans, they could have a negative impact on the environmen­t.

“I do drink tap water even though I’ve measured these concentrat­ions in tap water,” she said. “It’s a bit more of a concern that we discharge them in the river knowing that the river might accumulate some of these drugs, that the fish will be exposed.”

The study did not measure the drugs’ impact on the ecosystem.

Yargeau said that based on previous studies that detailed the effects of pharmaceut­icals on aquatic life, however, the drugs could potentiall­y alter fish behaviour and even threaten some species’ survival.

“We can assume that the fish might have a different behaviour when exposed to the drug, and maybe that would have a decline on the survival rate of a fish population,” she said.

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