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Date: Sat, 23 May 1998 11:09:19 -0700
To: toxicscaucus@onenw.org
From: Miranda Holmes
Subject: TC: Rachel #599: Dangers of Chlorinated Water
Sender: owner-toxicscaucus@onenw.org
===== A message from the 'toxicscaucus' discussion list =====
FYI - Vancouver has the highest rate of chlorination of drinking water of any city in North America.
Miranda
=======================Electronic Edition========================
. .
. RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY #599 .
. ---May 21, 1998--- .
. HEADLINES: .
. DANGERS OF CHLORINATED WATER .
. ========== .
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DANGERS OF CHLORINATED WATER
There were just over 4 million live births in the U.S. in 1992 (4,065,000, to be exact), according to the STATISTICAL ABSTRACT
OF THE UNITED STATES 1997.[1] In addition to these live births, there were 30,000 fetal deaths in 1992, the most recent year for
which we have data.[2] A fetal death is one that occurs after at least 20 weeks of gestation in the womb but prior to birth. In
actuality, there were very likely more than 30,000 fetal deaths in 1992. The STATISTICAL ABSTRACT (table 124) says, "There is
substantial evidence that not all fetal deaths for which reporting is required are reported." In any case, life
expectancy at birth in the U.S. in 1992 was 75.8 years,[3] so fetal deaths that year resulted in the loss of at least 30,000 x
75.8 = 2.27 million person-years of life. In addition, of course, many of these 30,000 fetal deaths precipitated a personal
crisis for the parents.
In addition to fetal deaths, there are spontaneous abortions --pregnancies that terminate spontaneously before the end of the
20th week of gestation. These are far more common than fetal deaths, though the exact number is not known. Various studies
estimate that spontaneous abortions occur in somewhere between 6.5% and 21% of all pregnancies.[4] Thus in 1992, there may have
been at least 265,000 to 855,000 spontaneous abortions in the U.S.
Together, spontaneous abortions and fetal deaths are termed
"miscarriages."
Recent studies indicate that some miscarriages --as well as some serious birth defects --may be caused by the chlorine added to
drinking water as a disinfectant.
In the U.S., chlorine is added to public drinking water supplies as a public health measure to kill harmful bacteria in the water.
The added chlorine reacts with naturally-occurring organic matter in the raw water (chiefly humic and fulvic acids),
creating a host of chlorinated chemicals as by-products. Health agencies, including the federal EPA [Environmental Protection
Agency] simply ignore most of these by-products and know almost nothing about them. Instead, they focus on four by-products,
allowing these four to act as surrogates for all the others. The four that EPA pays attention to are chloroform,
bromoform, bromodichloromethane, and chlorodibromomethane. Together, these four are called "trihalomethanes" or THMs. According to federal
drinking water regulations, if a public water supply serving over 10,000 people contains more than 100 parts per billion (ppb) of
total trihalomethanes, the water is unacceptable. However, since there are usually no other available sources of drinking water,
EPA is usually not in a position to do anything except urge the water supplier to try to clean up its act.
A study by the California Department of Health published in March, 1998, tracked the drinking water consumption and the
pregnancy outcomes of 5144 pregnant women in a prepaid health plan during the period 1989-1991.[5] This was a prospective
study --the drinking water consumption of the women was ascertained as soon as their pregnancy was registered in the
study's database. Later, the outcome of their pregnancy was compared with the amount of water they drank and the total amount
of trihalomethanes they received by drinking water (informationreceived from the water companies). The study found that 16% of
women drinking 5 or more glasses of water per day containing more than 75 ppb THMs had miscarriages, whereas only 9.5% of women
drinking less water, or water lower in THMs, had miscarriages.
Thus among women with high exposure to THMs in drinking water, the likelihood of spontaneous abortion was 1.8 times as great as
it was among women with low exposure. Furthermore, spontaneous abortion occurred, on average, a week earlier among women with
high exposure (10.2 vs. 11.2 weeks of gestation). The strength of this study was its prospective nature; it did not rely on
women to remember how much water they drank in the past.
To see if their results represented a real effect, the researchers compared women who filtered their water, or who let
the water stand before drinking it, with women who drank it straight from the tap. (THMs are volatile and will slowly leave
water that is allowed to stand.) The results were consistent with THMs causing spontaneous abortion.
In January of this year, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry published a case-control study showing that
serious birth defects --spina bifida, or neural tube defects --are associated with total trihalomethanes ingested in drinking
water.[6] Neural tube defects are serious birth defects in which the spinal cord is not properly enclosed by bone.
This statewide study in New Jersey found a doubled risk of neural tube defects among those with the highest exposures to THMs in
drinking water. This study pointed out that exposure to THMs can also occur through the contamination of indoor air. Flushing
toilets, showering, and washing dishes and clothes, can inject THMs into household air, exposing residents.
A previous study of 75 New Jersey towns by Frank Bove had examined 80,938 live births and 594 fetal deaths that occurred
during the period 1985-1988. This study examined public water company records and compared pregnancy outcomes to the amounts of
THMs delivered to the home in drinking water. It did not examine the amount of water ingested. The study found no relationship to
fetal deaths, but the likelihood of neural tube defects was tripled by exposure to THMs at levels exceeding 80 parts per
billion.
This study provoked a letter to the editor of the AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY,[8] in which the authors suggested a
biological mechanism by which trihalomethanes might cause neural tube defects. Neural tube defects are known to be associated
with vitamin B12 deficiency and the letter pointed to studies showing that vitamin B12 use by the body can be disrupted by
chloroform, one of the four main trihalomethanes in chlorinated drinking water.
An even earlier case-control study reported on pregnancy outcomes among women who delivered babies at Brigham and Women's Hospital
in Boston during the years 1977-1980. Indicators of water quality were taken from public water supply companies. No data
were available on the amount of water ingested. The water quality indicators were compared among 1039 cases of babies born
with birth defects, 77 stillbirths, and 55 neonatal deaths (babies that died within a week of birth) vs. 1177 controls.
Stillbirths were 2.6 times as common among women exposed to chlorinated surface water, compared to controls whose water was
disinfected with chloramine instead of chlorine.[9]
More recently, a study of drinking water and pregnancy outcomes in central North Carolina reported a 2.8-fold increased
likelihood of miscarriage among women in the highest exposure group for trihalomethanes in drinking water.[10]
Very recently, a second study from the California Department of Health has shown that, in one area of California, women who drank
cold tap water had nearly a five-fold increased risk of miscarriage, compared to women who drank mostly bottled water
very low in trihalomethanes.[11] Bottled water is often disinfected by a process called ozonation instead of
chlorination. Bubbling ozone through water kills bacteria effectively, avoids the distinctive taste and odor of chlorine in
the treated water, and produces no dangerous trihalomethanes. Many people buy bottled water simply to avoid the taste of
chlorine.
U.S. EPA is currently setting new standards for trihalomethanes in drinking water. The new regulations would apply to all water
companies, not just those serving 10,000 people or more, and they would limit total THMs to 80 ppb, down from the present 100
ppb.[12] Still, since several studies link trihalomethanes at 75 ppb or even less to increased miscarriages, EPA's new standard
seems dubious even before it has been established.
American water suppliers seem stuck on chlorination as the best way to disinfect drinking water. However, many European cities,
and some Canadian cities, such as Ottawa, have long ago turned away from chlorination in favor of ozonation to disinfect their
water. In recent years, a few smaller American cities have begun to use ozonation: Emporia, Kansas and Littleton, Massachusetts,
for example. The Santa Clara Valley Water District in California has announced that it is switching to ozonation over the next 5
to 8 years, as has the city of Las Vegas, Nevada.
Still the vast majority of water supplies in the U.S. remain chlorinated. And water quality experts remain in the dark about
trihalomethane levels in water delivered to customers. Kellyn S. Betts, writing in ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY quotes the
EPA official in charge of the new THM regulations saying no one knows how many U.S. water systems deliver water with THMs
exceeding 75 ppb.[12] Betts says the American Waterworks Association confirmed for her the absence of data on THM levels
in U.S. drinking water systems. The current reporting system only keeps track of water systems that exceed 100 ppb as an
annual average.
Erik Olson, a water quality expert with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), an environmental group in New York City,
points out that THM levels in water supplies typically increase by as much as a factor of 1.5 to 2 during the summer months. And
he says short-term exposures may be very important in producing some of the pregnancy outcomes reviewed here --spontaneous
abortions, fetal deaths, and serious birth defects. "We may be totally overlooking the risk of short-term exposure," Olson
said.[12]
--Peter Montague
(National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO)
===============
[1] STATISTICAL ABSTRACT OF THE UNITED STATES 1997 [117th edition] (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office,
October, 1997). See Table 88.
[2] The STATISTICAL ABSTRACT for 1997, cited above, Table 123, says there were 7.4 fetal deaths per 1000 live births in 1992, so
the total number of fetal deaths that year was 7.4 * 4,065 = 30,000.
[3] STATISTICAL ABSTRACT for 1997, cited above, table 117.
[4] S. Hamamah and others, "The effect of male factors in repeated spontaneous abortion: lessons from in-vitro
fertilization and intracytoplasmic sperm injection," HUMAN REPRODUCTION UPDATE Vol. 3, No. 4 (July 1997), pgs. 393-400.
[5] Kirsten Waller and others, "Trihalomethanes in Drinking Water and Spontaneous Abortion," EPIDEMIOLOGY Vol. 9, No. 2 (March
1998), pgs. 134-140.
[6] Judith B. Klotz and Laurie A. Pyrch, A CASE-CONTROL STUDY OF NEURAL TUBE DEFECTS AND DRINKING WATER CONTAMINANTS (Atlanta,
Ga.: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, January, 1998).
[7] Frank L. Bove and others, "Public Drinking Water Contamination and Birth Outcomes," AMERICAN JOURNAL OF
EPIDEMIOLOGY Vol. 141, No. 9 (May 1, 1995), pgs. 850-862.
[8] Andrew T. L. Chen and others, "RE: 'Public Drinking Water Contamination and Birth Outcomes,'" AMERICAN JOURNAL OF
EPIDEMIOLOGY Vol. 143, No. 11 (June 1, 1996), pgs. 1179-1180.
[9] Ann Aschengrau and others, "Quality of Community Drinking Water and the Occurrence of Late Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes,"
ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Vol. 48, No. 2 (March/April 1993), pgs. 105-113.
[10] David A. Savitz and others, "Drinking Water and Pregnancy Outcome in Central North Carolina: Source, Amount, and
Trihalomethane Levels," ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES Vol. 103, No. 6 (June 1995), pgs. 592-596.
[11] Shanna H. Swan and others, "A Prospective Study of Spontaneous Abortion: Relation to Amount and Source of Drinking
Water Consumed in Early Pregnancy," EPIDEMIOLOGY Vol. 9, No. 2 (March 1998), pgs. 126-133.
[12] Kellyn S. Betts, "Miscarriages associated with drinking water disinfection byproducts, study says," ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
& TECHNOLOGY [ES&T] April 1, 1998, pgs. 169A-170A.
Descriptor terms: drinking water; trihalomethanes; chloroform; fetal deaths; miscarriages; statistics;
bromoform; bromodichloromethane; chlorodibromomethane; thms; california; ca;
atsdr; nj; new jersey; neural tube defects; spina bifida; birth defects; epa;
ottawa, cn; emporia, ks; littleton, ma; santa clara, ca; las vegas, nv;
################################################################
NOTICE
Environmental Research Foundation provides this electronic version of RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY free of charge
even though it costs our organization considerable time and money to produce it. We would like to continue to provide this service
free. You could help by making a tax-deductible contribution (anything you can afford, whether $5.00 or $500.00). Please send
your tax-deductible contribution to: Environmental Research Foundation, P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403-7036. Please do
not send credit card information via E-mail. For further information about making tax-deductible contributions to
E.R.F. by credit card please phone us toll free at 1-888-2RACHEL, or at 1-410-263-1584, or fax us at 1-410-263-8944.
--Peter Montague, Editor
####################################################
===========================================================
Miranda Holmes, Toxics Campaigner,
Reach For Unbleached
1672 East 10th Avenue, Second Floor, Vancouver, B.C. V5N 1X5
Phone: 604-879-2992 Fax: 604-879-2272
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