Название: Applied Water Science
Автор: Группа авторов
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Физика
isbn: 9781119725268
isbn:
2.3.3 Human Health Risks: A Developing World Perspective
The potential human health risks could be higher in developing countries including those in Africa than in developed countries due to several risk factors. These risk factors are discussed in earlier reviews focusing on organic and emerging contaminants (Gwenzi and Chaukura, 2018; Gwenzi et al., 2019). These risk factors are underpinned by weak and poorly enforced regulations on environment, public health and medicines control prevalent in developing countries. Consequently, there is a thriving informal or black market for pharmaceuticals, including those long banned in developed countries, a scenario that promotes misuse and abuse of pharmaceuticals (Schwarzenbach et al., 2006).
The food safety and hygiene standards tend to be poor. Thus, the consumption of untreated drinking water and aquatic foods obtained from polluted aquatic systems is prevalent (Gwenzi and Chaukura, 2018). Even in cases where drinking water is treated, the capacity of conventional low-cost methods (e.g., biosand filtration, chlorination, solar disinfection, and boiling) to remove dissolved contaminants such as pharmaceuticals could be low (Gwenzi et al., 2017). In the case of chlorination, formation of carcinogenic disinfection by-products formed when chlorine reacts with organic materials may even increase the human health risks (Sorensen et al., 2015).
Poor solid waste and wastewater management practices, including direct discharge of raw wastewater promotes the contamination of aquatic systems with pharmaceuticals (Gwenzi and Chaukura, 2018). Moreover, the overuse and misuse of pharmaceuticals driven by the high burden of livestock and human diseases in tropical environments in developing countries could lead to increased release of pharmaceuticals into aquatic systems (Badejo, 2000). Yet, environmental and public health systems and health risk assessment of pharmaceuticals are non-existent in most developing countries. Taken together, the human health risks could be significant in these developing countries, highlighting the need for caution when extrapolating findings on human health risks based on evidence from developed countries. Thus, comprehensive research on human health risks, including toxicological and epidemiological studies are needed in developing countries especially those in Africa.
2.3.4 Removal of Pharmaceuticals
Most pharmaceuticals persist in the environment, thus improved removal methods are required to remove them from aquatic systems (Patel et al., 2019). The methods used for the removal of pharmaceuticals include biological, chemical, physical, and thermal methods. While physical methods include adsorption, electrodialysis, evaporation, filtration, flocculation, RO, and sedimentation, chemical methods encompass calcination, ion-exchange, precipitation, and reduction. Pyrolysis and incineration are thermal treatments. The most widely used biological techniques are activated sludge, anaerobic digestion, slow sand filters, and waste stabilization ponds (Chen et al., 2015). Whereas physical approaches transfer pharmaceutical compounds from the aqueous to the solid phase, biological and chemical methods chemically react the pharmaceuticals to generate new decomposition products, with the possibility of complete mineralization.
2.3.4.1 Conventional Removal Methods
Pharmaceuticals in drinking water are linked to their presence in raw water (Wang et al., 2019). The conventional drinking water treatment train has unit operations which include coagulation/flocculation, clarification, filtration, and disinfection (Zhang et al., 2017). These may be further complemented by advanced methods like activated carbon, membrane filtration, ozonation, or advanced oxidation processes. The conventional drinking water treatment process is incapable of efficiently removing pharmaceutical compounds from source water (Cunha et al., 2019). Nonetheless, limited removals could occur during the disinfection stage, which commonly uses chlorine, chlorine dioxide, and ozone (Patel et al., 2019; Wu et al., 2019). During clarification, chemicals are added to the source water to destabilize and flocculate colloidal particles, and facilitate settling together with suspended solids and sediments. For instance, ferric chloride causes hydrolysis of hydrophilic pharmaceutical compounds such as acetaminophen, dehydronifedipine and sulfamethoxazole, resulting in their removal, albeit at low percentage. The effectiveness of coagulation/flocculation is pH and dosage dependent (Ramavandi, 2014). Solution pH affects the availability of OCl- and HOCl, and this consequently affects the oxidation process. The disinfection stage has been reported to remove up to 75% of acetaminophen, erythromycin, and sulfamethoxazole (Patel et al., 2019). Chlorine dioxide oxidizes and removes pharmaceutical compounds more effectively than chlorine. Nonetheless, some pharmaceuticals are significantly reduced by ozone. Despite its capacity to degrade a variety of pharmaceutical compounds, chlorination is limited to aqueous systems which are less polluted to avoid elevated concentrations of ammonia and dissolved organic carbon. Moreover, the mineralization due to chlorination is insignificant, and it potentially produces a variety of disinfection byproducts, which are carcinogenic to humans (Zhang et al., 2017; Tian et al., 2019).
Most wastewater treatment plants use primary screening, aerobic and anaerobic digestion, and biological filtration processes. Although these plants are not designed to remove pharmaceuticals, they can moderately remediate them. Many pharmaceutical compounds cannot effectively adsorb onto activated sludge, and microbes used in secondary treatment cannot completely digest them (Patel et al., 2019). In addition, xenobiotics inhibit microbial activity, hence their incomplete removal (Tsoumachidou et al., 2017). The variations in the removal of pharmaceutical compounds are influenced by the chemical structure, design of the treatment process, and the physico-chemical characteristics of the source water, which is a function of seasonal variation. The hydrophobicity of the pharmaceuticals influences their removal. For instance, while polar compounds have very low removals (7%–10%), pharmaceuticals with medium polarity exhibit higher removals (Patel et al., 2019). Thus, the treatment method, plant design, residence time, seasonal variation, and operating conditions influence the degradation of pharmaceuticals in wastewater treatment plants. Whereas biodegradation mainly occurs when the pharmaceutical compounds are in solution, the adsorption process involves electrostatic attractions and/or hydrophobicity, and the content of suspended matter (Rosales et al., 2017; Patel et al., 2019). At neutral pH, acidic pharmaceutical compounds ionize to the conjugate base decreasing the adsorption on sludge. However, basic and zwitterionic pharmaceutical compounds exhibit significant adsorption. Generally, the degradation of pharmaceutical compounds increases with increasing residence time. Compared to pharmaceuticals with short and linear side chains, long and branched pharmaceuticals are less susceptible to biodegradation (Patel et al., 2019). Aromatic and saturated aliphatic pharmaceuticals with sulfur and halogen moieties are also recalcitrant to biodegradation. The degradation of some pharmaceutical compounds significantly increases with the age of the sludge. Partitioning of the pharmaceuticals between the aqueous phase and sludge is influenced by the hydrophobicity of the compound; whereby highly hydrophobic pharmaceutical compounds are attracted, particularly to biosolids СКАЧАТЬ