1. Physical injury risks associated with drinking water arsenic treatment.
- Author
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Frost FJ, Chwirka J, Craun GF, Thomson B, and Stomps J
- Subjects
- Accidents, Traffic statistics & numerical data, Adsorption, Aluminum Oxide, Arsenic toxicity, Filtration, Humans, Ion Exchange, Maximum Allowable Concentration, New Mexico, Risk Assessment, United States, United States Environmental Protection Agency, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms etiology, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity, Water Supply, Arsenic isolation & purification, Water Pollutants, Chemical isolation & purification, Water Purification methods
- Abstract
We estimated the number of transportation deaths that would be associated with water treatment in Albuquerque to meet the EPA's recently proposed revisions of the Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) for arsenic. Vehicle mileage was estimated for ion exchange, activated alumina, and iron coagulation/microfiltration water treatment processes to meet an MCL of 0.020 mg/L, 0.010 mg/L, 0.005 mg/L, and 0.003 mg/L. Local crash, injury, and death rates per million vehicle miles were used to estimate the number of injuries and deaths. Depending on the water treatment options chosen, we estimate that meeting an arsenic MCL of 0.005 mg/L will result in 143 to 237 crashes, 58 to 98 injuries, and 0.6 to 2.6 deaths in Albuquerque over a 70-year period, resulting in 26 to 113 years of life lost. The anticipated health benefits for Albuquerque residents from a 0.005 mg/L arsenic MCL, estimated using either a multistage Weibull or Poisson model, ranged from 3 to 80 arsenic-related bladder and lung cancer deaths prevented over a 70-year period, adding between 43 and 1,123 years of life. Whether a revised arsenic MCL increases or reduces overall loss of life in Albuquerque depends on the accuracy of EPA's cancer risk assessment. If the multistage Weibull model accurately estimates the benefits, the years of life added is comparable or lower than the anticipated years lost due to transportation associated with the delivery of chemicals, disposal of treatment waste, and operation of the water treatment system. Coagulation/microfiltration treatment will result in substantially fewer transportation deaths than either ion exchange or activated alumina.
- Published
- 2002
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