Indian Water Streams Found Containing High Levels of Drugs
In a recent study it has been found that Indian water streams contain high levels of antibiotics to treat almost 90,000 people in one stream. The water samples were taken from Patancheru treated water. This waste water is the drain of about 90 drug manufacturing companies.
These tests and researches have been lead by Joakim Larsson, an environmental scientist at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, and his team at Patancheru Enviro Tech Ltd. Plant. The shocking result showed that the water is abundant in Ciprofloxacin, a renowned antibiotic used for various disease treatments.
The so called treated water contained 21 antibiotics traces in it. These 21 medicines are used in general to treat ailments like ulcer, gonorrhea, chronic liver disease, hypertension, heart ailments, depression, and other such diseases. The water is undoubtedly harmful for health, which poor villagers are forced to drink; “We don’t have any other source, so we’re drinking it.” Klaus Kuemmerer, a chemist at the University of Freiburg Medical Center in Germany, an expert on drug resistance said, “If you take a bath there, then you have all the antibiotics you need for treatment,” “If you just swallow a few gasps of water, you’re treated for everything. The question is for how long?”
Sponsors
Advertisement
Featured Articles
Early Pregnancy Symptoms
The signs and symptoms of pregnancy are different among women. Once a woman gets pregnant, some changes within th...
Food Poisoning Treatment
Food poisoning may appear due to intake of contaminated food in solid or liquid form. This is a common illness al...
Food Poisoning Causes
Food poisoning is one of the very common illnesses. It is mild for most people but sometimes become severe and even ...
Alcohol Addiction
Alcoholism is a broad based term that includes the users all initial stages of the alcohol users or in other works alcoh...
Vitamin D Benefits
Cod liver oil has been used in the treatment of rickets for more than 100 years but it was not till 1918. Sir Edward Me...



