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Druggy Waters --
Local programs offer solutions for pharmaceutical pollution
By Kera Abraham
Posted: Thursday, 27 March 2008

Pharmaca pharmacy manager David Villareal (left) and MAHAFA (Formerly known as AfricareMeds)
founder
Richard Anyanwu (right) work to keep drugs out of our water supply.
Antidepressants,
birth control pills, steroids, antibiotics, painkillers: They’re not
only in the bodies of people taking them, but also in the water we
drink. Unused and expired medications that are flushed down the
toilet or thrown in the trash can enter the water supply, thus
exposing communities to constant weak cocktails of randomly mixed
drugs.
Two local initiatives – a medicine take-back program and a charity
that provides health care in Nigeria – offer alternatives.
Studies have established that many tap water supplies are
unintentionally dosed. A recently released Associated Press
investigation found drugs in the municipal water of 24 cities,
including San Francisco, whose water tested positive for a sex
hormone. A 2002 U.S. Geological Survey analysis of streams in 30
states found pharmaceuticals in more than 80 percent of the
waterways tested.
Compounding the problem: pharmaceutical use is on the rise.
Disbursements of commonly abused meds such as codeine and oxycodone
more than doubled between 2000 and 2004, according to the Drug
Enforcement Administration. After the drugs pass through our bodies
and get flushed down the toilet, they enter the sewage system.
Then there’s the issue of the medicines we don’t take. The Community
Medical Foundation for Patient Safety reports that more than 40
percent of prescription meds – particularly psychotherapy drugs – go
unused, for a variety of reasons. According to a 2006 study in the
Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine, 35 percent of
patients have rinsed medications down the sink and 54 percent have
flushed them down the toilet.
Most sewage systems remove some, but not all, pharmaceutical
compounds before discharging treated wastewater into public
waterways. Medicines dumped in the trash can seep out of landfills
and enter the water table.
Researchers have discovered a range of impacts on aquatic life. Male
fish exposed to estrogen have become female; shellfish dosed with
Prozac have released non-viable eggs; antidepressants have pissed
off lobsters. The impact on humans is not well understood, but a
2006 study found that a low-level mixture of 13 common drugs can
affect the growth of human embryonic cells.
The California Integrated Waste Management Board currently has no
official policy for disposing of household medical waste. But last
October, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a bill aiming to change
that. The new law directs the CIWMB, Department of Health Services
and other state agencies to create pilot take-back programs allowing
people to return unused meds to pharmacies and health-care
providers. The agencies will later report to the Legislature on how
the programs can be implemented statewide. CIWMB is just beginning
to work out the details, says agency spokeswoman Beatriz Sandoval.
While bureaucrats slog through their processes, one nonprofit is
implementing solutions. In May 2007, Teleosis, a Berkeley-based
organization dedicated to reducing the environmental impacts of
health care, launched a program to encourage safe drug disposal.
Under the Green Pharmacy Program, people may return unused meds to
14 participating pharmacies and doctors’ offices.
Teleosis encourages health-care staff to dump out pills and recycle
their plastic containers. A medical waste hauler collects the meds
and takes them to a facility in Texas, where they’re incinerated.
The byproducts are trapped and cleaned before they’re released into
the environment, according to Teleosis program manager Evin Guy. The
initiative already has safely disposed of more than 1,000 pounds of
medication, she says.
Pharmaca Integrative Pharmacy, one of the program’s partners, offers
the take-back service at its new Monterey store on Munras Avenue.
The location has collected more than 70 pounds of medications since
its grand opening in late February, according to pharmacy manager
David Villareal. The store offers customers a $1 coupon for every
vial they bring in, while coupons last. “The community has had an
overwhelming response,” Villareal says.
For legal reasons, Pharmaca can’t accept narcotics such as valium,
morphine or codeine, he says. But it will take other prescription
meds, samples from doctors’ offices, vitamins, supplements and
over-the-counter drugs, such as Tylenol and ibuprofen.
If the meds are unexpired, they still may have a useful life.
Seaside resident Richard Anyanwu, a registered nurse and Baptist
deacon, runs the nonprofit MAHAFA (Formerly known as AfricareMeds), which has been providing
health care to indigent Nigerians since 2002. With donations from
dozens of local sponsors, Anyanwu took more than 500 pounds of
medical supplies to Nigeria last December. Two doctors and four
nurses administered tests and prescribed medicines for almost 800
people in need, he says.
The latest information about drugs in the water supply only adds
urgency to Africare’s mission. “Now the fish are getting sick,”
Anyanwu says, “because they’re getting hormones that weren’t
prescribed to them.”
By taking unused drugs out of the waste stream, his nonprofit
performs the double service of getting medicines to patients who
need them – and keeping them away from the people and animals who
don’t.
DONATE UNEXPIRED MEDS TO MAHAFA (Formerly known as AfricareMeds), 640 ELM AVE., SEASIDE.
899-2280, MAHAFA (Formerly known as AfricareMeds).COM. TAKE EXPIRED MEDICATIONS TO PHARMACA
INTEGRATIVE PHARMACY, 570 MUNRAS AVE., MONTEREY. 333-0751,
PHARMACA.COM.
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Photo Text:
Pharmaca pharmacy manager David Villareal (left) and MAHAFA (Formerly known as AfricareMeds)
founder Richard Anyanwu (right) work to keep drugs out of our water
supply.
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Donations to MAHAFA (Formerly AfricareMeds) can be in the form of monetary, office equipment, office supplies (stamps, paper, etc), vehicles - donated vehicles will be sold and proceeds will be used for purchasing of supplies.
Your gift, donation or assistance will enable us to provide much needed medical care and medications to children and adults who desperately need it. We submit receipts for all donations.
Donations are tax-deductible as allowed by law.
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