Free Prescription Drugs—in Drinking Water!
November 23, 2014
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You don't have to see a doctor to imbibe a witch's brew of prescriptions pain pills, antibiotics and psychiatric,
cholesterol, asthma, epilepsy and heart drugs in your drinking water. They are found in many public drinking water
systems says the Associated Press. Also found in drinking water is the toxic plastic, Bisphenol A. Some of the Bisphenol
A comes from plastic bottled water which people, ironically, drink to avoid tap water risks!
Both the drug industry and water treatment experts say you don't have to worry about prescription drugs in drinking
water. But it is only recently that serious testing has even been conducted. Mary Buzby director of environmental
technology for Merck validated the fears in 2007. "There's no doubt about it, pharmaceuticals are being detected in the
environment and there is genuine concern that these compounds, in the small concentrations that they're at, could be
causing impacts to human health or to aquatic organisms," she remarked at a conference in 2007.
Fish are a good indicator of the health of the water like canaries in the coal mine and they are revealing shocking
effects. Fish caught near wastewater treatment plants near five major U.S. cities had residues of cholesterol, high
blood pressure, allergy, bipolar and depression drugs reported Discovery news. Male fish in the estrogen-saturated St.
Lawrence River around Montreal are developing ovaries, reported Daniel Cyr, at Quebec's National Institute for Science
Research according to the Independent Post. Feminized frogs with both female and male sex organs are already
increasingly found in U.S. waterways and even suburban ponds. Fish in the same area as the feminized fish are also
showing signs of the antidepressant Prozac in their systems says the University of Montreal.
The Southern Daily Echo News also reported fish on Prozac. The fish that were observed were five times more likely to
swim toward light than away from it, making them also more susceptible to predators.
Shrimp are also believed to be at risk. ''Crustaceans are crucial to the food chain and if shrimps' natural behaviour is
being changed because of antidepressant levels in the sea this could seriously upset the natural balance of the
ecosystem," says Dr Alex Ford, from the University of Portsmouth's Institute of Marine Sciences.
Big Ag is also putting drugs in the water. Even if you don't eat hormone-grown cattle you can ingest the hormone
trenbolone from ear implants reports the Associated Press. Water taken near a Nebraska feedlot had four times the
trenbolone levels as other water samples and male fathead minnows nearby had low testosterone levels and small heads.
What can we do about the drug store in our drinking water? Certainly, never flush your meds down the toilet since water
systems are clearly not removing everything. Ask your local government how often and how carefully your drinking water
is tested for prescription drugs. Boycott foods grown with chemicals like hormone and antibiotics which contaminate
water ways, especially animal products. And finally, start taking drug ads on TV with a grain of salt. Many drugs that
people take for "seasonal allergies," GERD, insomnia and "depression" are unnecessary and were never taken before drug
ads on TV. There are natural cures that are safer for people, aquatic life and drinking water.
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Read more investigative journalism in Martha Rosenberg’s exposé Born With a Junk Food Deficiency: How Flaks, Quacks, and Hacks Pimp the Public Health, available from Random House, at Barnes and Noble and on Amazon. It makes a great holiday gift and supports independent journalism.