[Pharmwaste] FW: 99.9% of drugs in water are from excretion

BOGGS, STEVEN SBOGGS at idem.IN.gov
Thu Jul 8 08:33:22 EDT 2010


At least in Indiana: I believe most leachate is disposed of through waste waster treatment facilities, and some landfills are directly connected to sewers. 

Steven Boggs
Indiana Dept. of Environmental Management
Office of Pollution Prevention & Technical Assistance
100 N. Senate Ave, MC 64-01
Indianapolis, IN 46204-2251
(317) 233-6660 or 800-988-7901
FAX (317) 234-6573
Email: sboggs at idem.in.gov
Internet: www.recycle.in.gov

________________________________________
From: Volkman, Jennifer (MPCA) [mailto:Jennifer.Volkman at state.mn.us] 
Sent: Thursday, July 08, 2010 2:25 AM
To: gressitt; , "pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Subject: RE: [Pharmwaste] FW: 99.9% of drugs in water are from excretion

Pass! :)
 
________________________________________
From: gressitt [gressitt at zoho.com]
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 8:05 PM
To: Volkman, Jennifer (MPCA)
Cc: Pamela Ortner; Tenace, Laurie; ,"pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Subject: RE: [Pharmwaste] FW: 99.9% of drugs in water are from excretion
HAving presented at a couple Patient Adherence and Compliance conferences over the past several years, I'd like to say that the manufacturers have a deep abiding interest in people taking their meds and not stopping. Much money has been spent commercially and in support of academicresearch to eke out small percentage gains in adherence. Almost any one of those programs would be more than all of us have spent in drug disposal. I really think that nobody in this whole process wants the waste. 
Stevan Gressitt, M.D.
Faculty Associate, University of Maine Center on Aging
Founding Director
Maine Institute for Safe Medicine
University of New England, College of Pharmacy
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences 
Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
University of New England, College of Osteopathic Medicine
716 Stevens Avenue 
Portland, Maine 04103
gressitt at gmail.com 
Cell: 207-441-0291 
 


---- On Wed, 07 Jul 2010 20:39:48 -0400 Jennifer (MPCA) Volkman <Jennifer.Volkman at state.mn.us> wrote ---- 
Regardless of PhRMA's assumptions, anyone who has sorted pharms from collection programs knows well that an incredible amount of drugs are completely wasted.  We have pharmatizing in every media and taking up more space each day, desperate patients looking for the magic pill, internet scam sales, the disconnect between insurance dollars and prescribing practices.  There are so many issues coming into better light as we generate more data.  It is just one more area where excess generates so many problems: pollution, abuse, poisoning, millions of dollars down the drain and up in smoke.  There is hope in this article?  I'm sure we can turn the ship while the interest is still building.
 
HEALTH   | July 06, 2010 
In a World of Throwaways, Making a Dent in Medical Waste
By INGFEI CHEN 
Untold numbers of unused, and reusable, health care supplies and equipment end up in millions of tons of health care industry trash. 
  
 
________________________________________
From: pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us [pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us] On Behalf Of Pamela Ortner [portner at angelahospice.net]
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 5:36 PM
To: gressitt; Tenace, Laurie
Cc: pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Subject: Re: [Pharmwaste] FW: 99.9% of drugs in water are from excretion
I think one needs to be careful about quoting PhRMA. The EPA did not say 99.99% of APIs come from excretion; PhRMA (Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America) did. PhRMA accounts for 80% of drug sales in the US so it might be in their best interest to say the majority of the drug comes from excretion as it might lessen liability.
 
Pamela Ortner, MS, RN, CHPN, COHN-S
Quality Improvement/Education Coordinator
Angela Hospice
14100 Newburgh Rd.
Livonia, Michigan 48154
(734) 953-6040
 
"Willing is not enough, we must act.  Knowing is not enough, we must do."
                                                                                                     Goethe                             
 
 
From: gressitt at zoho.com href="mailto:gressitt at zoho.com" shape=rect target=_blank>gressitt 
To: Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us href="mailto:Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us" shape=rect target=_blank>Tenace, Laurie 
Cc: pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us href="mailto:pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us" shape=rect target=_blank>pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us 
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 2:31 PM
Subject: Re: [Pharmwaste] FW: 99.9% of drugs in water are from excretion

One problem is much household waste in Maine is incinerated, not landfilled. I suspect likewise with WTE plants....
Stevan Gressitt, M.D.
Faculty Associate, University of Maine Center on Aging
Founding Director
Maine Institute for Safe Medicine
University of New England, College of Pharmacy
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences 
Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
University of New England, College of Osteopathic Medicine
716 Stevens Avenue 
Portland, Maine 04103
gressitt at gmail.com 
Cell: 207-441-0291 
 


---- On Wed, 07 Jul 2010 13:33:09 -0400 Laurie Tenace <Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us> wrote ---- 
Several months ago a list serve member mentioned that 99.9% of active pharmaceutical ingredient surface water releases were from patient excretion. I stumbled across this reference to that number the other day:
 
page 69 of http://nepis.epa.gov/EPA/html/DLwait.htm?url=/Adobe/PDF/P1001AWF.PDF (or section 6.3)
  
EPA performed a literature search for studies or reports on pharmaceuticals disposed of in landfills. EPA found that in 2007, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) evaluated the potential for 24 active pharmaceutical ingredients to leach from MSW landfills and their potential releases to surface water (Tischler, 2007). PhRMA compared the modeled landfill leachate releases to estimates of surface water releases from disposal of unused pharmaceuticals down the drain. PhRMA selected the 24 example pharmaceutical ingredients to represent a range of sales per year in the U.S. (i.e., high quantities and low quantities) and a range of physical-chemical properties. These pharmaceutical ingredients were also evaluated in the 2002 USGS study of pharmaceuticals in surface waters (Kolpin et al., 2002).
  
The PhRMA study calculated that the landfill disposal pathway to surface water accounted for an average of 0.03% to 0.10% of the estimated aggregate annual surface water releases for the 24 active pharmaceutical ingredients. Therefore, the study estimated that over 99.9% of active pharmaceutical ingredient surface water releases would be due to patient excretion, not landfill disposal of unused medicines, assuming that landfill disposal were used for all unused medicine disposal. The evaluation was based on the assumption that the efficiency of the pharmaceuticals partitioning to solids in the landfill is 50% of the efficiency of partitioning in a biological wastewater treatment unit (Tischler, 2007).
  
Laurie Tenace
Environmental Specialist
Waste Reduction Section
Florida Department of Environmental Protection
2600 Blair Stone Rd., MS 4555
Tallahassee FL 32399-2400
P: 850.245.8759
F: 850.245.8811
Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us  
  
Mercury: http://www.dep.state.fl.us/waste/categories/mercury/default.htm
  
Batteries: http://www.dep.state.fl.us/waste/categories/batteries/default.htm
  
Pharmaceuticals: 
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/waste/categories/medications/default.htm
To join the Pharmwaste listserve: http://lists.dep.state.fl.us/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pharmwaste
  
Household Hazardous Waste:
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/waste/categories/hazardous/pages/household.htm
  
  

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