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Reconnaissance of Mixed Organic and Inorganic Chemicals in Private and Public Supply Tapwaters at Selected Residential and Workplace Sites in the United States.

Authors :
Bradley PM
Kolpin DW
Romanok KM
Smalling KL
Focazio MJ
Brown JB
Cardon MC
Carpenter KD
Corsi SR
DeCicco LA
Dietze JE
Evans N
Furlong ET
Givens CE
Gray JL
Griffin DW
Higgins CP
Hladik ML
Iwanowicz LR
Journey CA
Kuivila KM
Masoner JR
McDonough CA
Meyer MT
Orlando JL
Strynar MJ
Weis CP
Wilson VS
Source :
Environmental science & technology [Environ Sci Technol] 2018 Dec 04; Vol. 52 (23), pp. 13972-13985. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Nov 21.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Safe drinking water at the point-of-use (tapwater, TW) is a United States public health priority. Multiple lines of evidence were used to evaluate potential human health concerns of 482 organics and 19 inorganics in TW from 13 (7 public supply, 6 private well self-supply) home and 12 (public supply) workplace locations in 11 states. Only uranium (61.9 μg L <superscript>-1</superscript> , private well) exceeded a National Primary Drinking Water Regulation maximum contaminant level (MCL: 30 μg L <superscript>-1</superscript> ). Lead was detected in 23 samples (MCL goal: zero). Seventy-five organics were detected at least once, with median detections of 5 and 17 compounds in self-supply and public supply samples, respectively (corresponding maxima: 12 and 29). Disinfection byproducts predominated in public supply samples, comprising 21% of all detected and 6 of the 10 most frequently detected. Chemicals designed to be bioactive (26 pesticides, 10 pharmaceuticals) comprised 48% of detected organics. Site-specific cumulative exposure-activity ratios (∑ <subscript>EAR</subscript> ) were calculated for the 36 detected organics with ToxCast data. Because these detections are fractional indicators of a largely uncharacterized contaminant space, ∑ <subscript>EAR</subscript> in excess of 0.001 and 0.01 in 74 and 26% of public supply samples, respectively, provide an argument for prioritized assessment of cumulative effects to vulnerable populations from trace-level TW exposures.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-5851
Volume :
52
Issue :
23
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Environmental science & technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30460851
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b04622