A month after an Associated Press investigation revealed that
the water supply of at least 41 million Americans is infested with a vast
array of pharmaceuticals, including antibiotics, anti-consultants, mood
stabilizers and sex hormones, Chicago officials announced Thursday that they
have begun testing for pharmaceutical drugs in Lake Michigan drinking water and
vowed to put the results on the Internet.
The announcement follows a Chicago Tribune investigation unveiling
trace amounts of a prescription anti-seizure drug, a common painkiller, a
nicotine byproduct, caffeine and two chemicals used to make Teflon and
Scotchgard. The chemicals were found by a lab previously hired by the newspaper
to make the analysis.
It’s true that the concentrations of these pharmaceuticals
are tiny, far below the levels of a medical dose, but everyone drinks water and
according to doctors’ advice we should drink it in high quantities to keep
ourselves healthy. Therefore, drinking high quantities of water leads to
ingurgitating high quantities of these pharmaceuticals, which is bad for our
health.
Following the Tribune article, Water Department Commissioner
John Spatz said the city decided last month to conduct its own studies.
“This is an important environmental issue that has been brought
to light. We should be monitoring and making sure it isn't getting in the
water. And we need the health agencies to figure out if there is anything to be
worried about,” Spatz said.
He also said the region’s drinking water is safe to drink after initial tests, looking for 76 compounds, were performed. He called the initial results “encouraging,” but he declined to provide details. However, he acknowledged there are growing concerns about effects on health from even low levels of pharmaceuticals in drinking water.