Drug consumption estimates are traditionally based on surveys or information from police seizures. Alternatively, residues of illicit drugs in untreated wastewater (influent) can be used to calculate mass loads and subsequently estimate drug consumption in the community throughout the week. For this purpose, wastewater is commonly sampled for seven consecutive days within the Sewage analysis CORe group Europe (SCORE), while other sampling schemes may be implemented in long-term studies outside this consortium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompounds originating from animal husbandry can pollute surface water through the application of manure to soil. Typically, grab sampling is employed to detect these residues, which only provides information on the concentration at the time of sampling. To better understand the emission patterns of these compounds, we utilized passive samplers in surface water to collect data at eight locations in a Dutch agricultural region, during different time intervals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith increasing numbers of chemicals used in modern society, assessing human and environmental exposure to them is becoming increasingly difficult. Recent advances in wastewater-based epidemiology enable valuable insights into public exposure to data-poor compounds. However, measuring all >26,000 chemicals registered under REACH is not just technically unfeasible but would also be incredibly expensive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA one year study was conducted in the city of Nijmegen, The Netherlands, to characterize various urban sources of antibiotics and antibiotic resistant genes (ARGs) in wastewater within a single sewer catchment. Prevalence of ermB, tet(W), sul1, sul2, intl1, and 16S rRNA gene was determined at 10 locations within the city. Sampling locations included a nursing home, a student residence, a hospital and an industrial area, among others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVeterinary pharmaceuticals (VPs) residues may end up on the soil via manure, and from there can be transported to groundwater due to leaching. In this study an analytical framework to estimate the leaching potential of VPs at the national scale is presented. This approach takes soil-applied VPs concentrations, soil-hydraulic and soil-chemical properties, groundwater levels, sorption and degradation of VPs into account.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF