Title of article :
Occurrence of pharmaceuticals in Taiwanʹs surface waters: Impact of waste streams from hospitals and pharmaceutical production facilities Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Angela Yu-Chen Lin، نويسنده , , Yu-Ting Tsai، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
We investigated the occurrence and distribution of pharmaceuticals (including antibiotics, estrogens, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), beta-blockers, and lipid regulators) in three rivers and in the waste streams of six hospitals and four pharmaceutical production facilities in Taiwan. The most frequently detected pharmaceuticals were acetaminophen, erythromycin-H2O, sulfamethoxazole, and gemfibrozil. NSAIDs were the next most-often detected compounds, with a detection frequency > 60%. The other analytes were not detected or were seen in only a few samples at trace concentrations. The present study demonstrates a significant discharge of human medications from hospital and drug production facilities into surface waters in the Taipei district. The high concentrations of pharmaceuticals found in the Sindian and Dahan rivers demonstrate the alarming degree to which they have been impacted by urban drainage (waste effluents from hospitals, households, and pharmaceutical production facilities). The ubiquitous occurrence at extremely high concentrations of acetaminophen and erythromycin-H2O in both rivers (up to 15.7 and 75.5 µg/L) and in wastewater from hospitals and pharmaceutical production facilities (up to 417.5 and 7.84 µg/L) was unique. This finding, in combination with acetaminophenʹs status as the drug most often prescribed by Taiwanʹs dominant clinical institute, suggests the potential use of acetaminophen as a molecular indicator of contamination of Taiwanʹs aqueous environments with untreated urban drainage.
Keywords :
Pharmaceuticals , Antibiotics , Hospital effluents , Drug production facility effluents
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment