Science, Art, Litt, Science based Art & Science Communication
When Indian researchers looked into the release of wastewater from Indian pharmaceutical production facilities estimated that processed water from one plant contained 45 kg of ciprofloxacin per day (in comparison, the total daily consumption in Sweden is 9 kg). Downstream from that plant the sediments contained high amounts of antibiotics and, as a natural consequence, antibiotic resistant bacteria (1).
Wastewater with high antibiotic content is problematic for at least two reasons: resistance selection including dispersal, and proper function of waste processing.
This was demonstrated in a study where researchers collected samples from a sewage treatment plant receiving wastewater from a pharmaceutical factory. Samples were taken from different stages of the treatment process, and viable bacteria were cultured. 93 strains of bacteria were isolated and investigated further. The strains were identified and their susceptibility to 39 antibiotics from 12 classes was determined with disc diffusion methodology. The presence of integrons, mobile elements capable of transferring resistance between bacteria, was also determined.
The study found that a high degree of antibiotic resistance was found in the isolated strains, including:
A prior study had revealed alarmingly high rates of antibiotic resistance in river sediments downstream of the plant, and therefore indicated that the presence of the highly resistant bacteria was not confined within the treatment plant (1).
This antibiotic resistance through sewage contamination has been reported all over the world and I read several research papers on it ( I am giving just a few citations here as evidence but there are hundreds of reports like this: 2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10).
Wastewater containing high levels of antibiotics is a serious environmental problem. Techniques which effectively remove antibiotics and other chemicals need to be deployed before release to wastewater treatment plants, and measure to better control dispersal of antibiotic resistance through processed water or remaining sludge urgently need to be required and put in place.
But this is hardly done in India.
Imagine if everybody uses unused antibiotics to kill the bacteria in their commodes and all this sewage water containing antibiotics becomes responsible for making more resistant microbes?
This will increase antibiotic resistance when the antibiotics reach sewage. When the same resistant bacteria infects people, you can't cure the infection and this may lead to death. People will die because of this thoughtless tip! We are fighting this very menace of antibiotic resistance.
And a few housewives are giving these harmful tips on popular social media and undoing all that we are doing.
Don't we get annoyed! Like hell we will!
Footnotes:
1. https://www.reactgroup.org/news-and-views/news-and-opinions/year-20...
2. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41545-020-0050-16. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S004313540600...
7. https://www.intechopen.com/chapters/53627
8. https://www.hindawi.com/journals/jeph/2020/2796365/
9. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S004565351500...
10. APHA, Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, American Public Health Association, Washington, DC, USA, 2017.
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