We have organized the information in the following order:
Contaminants
|
Potential Health Effects
from Ingestion of Water
|
Sources of Contaminant in
Drinking Water
|
|
TT 3
|
Gastrointestinal illness
(e.g., diarrhea, vomiting, cramps)
|
Human and fecal animal
waste
|
|
Giardia lamblia
|
TT3
|
Gastrointestinal illness
(e.g., diarrhea, vomiting, cramps)
|
Human and animal fecal
waste
|
Heterotrophic plate count
|
TT3
|
HPC has no health
effects; it is an analytic method used to measure the variety of bacteria
that are common in water. The lower the concentration of bacteria in drinking
water, the better maintained the water system is.
|
HPC measures a range of
bacteria that are naturally present in the environment
|
TT3
|
Legionnaire's Disease, a
type of pneumonia
|
Found naturally in water; multiplies in
heating systems
|
|
5.0%4
|
Not a health threat in
itself; it is used to indicate whether other potentially harmful bacteria may
be present
|
Coliforms are naturally
present in the environment; as well as feces; fecal coliforms and E.
colionly come from human and animal fecal waste.
|
|
TT3
|
Turbidity is a measure of
the cloudiness of water. It is used to indicate water quality and filtration
effectiveness (e.g., whether disease-causing organisms are present). Higher
turbidity levels are often associated with higher levels of disease-causing
microorganisms such as viruses, parasites and some bacteria. These organisms
can cause symptoms such as nausea, cramps, diarrhea, and associated
headaches.
|
Soil runoff
|
|
Viruses (enteric)
|
TT3
|
Gastrointestinal illness
(e.g., diarrhea, vomiting, cramps)
|
Human and animal fecal
waste
|
Contaminant
|
Potential Health Effects from Ingestion of Water
|
Sources of Contaminant in Drinking Water
|
|
Bromate
|
0.010
|
Increased risk of cancer
|
Byproduct of drinking
water disinfection
|
Chlorite
|
1.0
|
Anemia; infants &
young children: nervous system effects
|
Byproduct of drinking
water disinfection
|
Haloacetic acids (HAA5)
|
0.060
|
Increased risk of cancer
|
Byproduct of drinking
water disinfection
|
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
|
0.10
---------- 0.080 |
Liver, kidney or central
nervous system problems; increased risk of cancer
|
Byproduct of drinking
water disinfection
|
Disinfectants
Contaminant
|
Potential Health Effects
from Ingestion of Water
|
Sources of Contaminant in
Drinking Water
|
|
MRDL=4.01
|
Eye/nose irritation;
stomach discomfort, anemia
|
Water additive used to
control microbes
|
|
MRDL=4.01
|
Eye/nose irritation; stomach discomfort
|
Water additive used to control microbes
|
|
MRDL=0.81
|
Anemia; infants & young children:
nervous system effects
|
Water additive used to control microbes
|
Contaminant
|
Potential Health Effects
from Ingestion of Water
|
Sources of Contaminant in
Drinking Water
|
|
0.006
|
Increase in blood
cholesterol; decrease in blood sugar
|
Discharge from petroleum
refineries; fire retardants; ceramics; electronics; solder
|
|
0.010
as of 01/23/06 |
Skin damage or problems with circulatory
systems, and may have increased risk of getting cancer
|
Erosion of natural deposits; runoff from
orchards, runoff from glass & electronicsproduction wastes
|
|
7 MFL
|
Increased risk of developing benign
intestinal polyps
|
Decay of asbestos cement in water mains;
erosion of natural deposits
|
|
2
|
Increase in blood pressure
|
Discharge of drilling wastes; discharge
from metal refineries; erosion of natural deposits
|
|
0.004
|
Intestinal lesions
|
Discharge from metal refineries and
coal-burning factories; discharge from electrical, aerospace, and defense
industries
|
|
0.005
|
Kidney damage
|
Corrosion of galvanized pipes;
erosion of natural deposits; discharge from metal refineries; runoff from
waste batteries and paints
|
|
0.1
|
Allergic dermatitis
|
Discharge from steel and pulp mills;
erosion of natural deposits
|
|
TT8;
Action Level=1.3 |
Short term exposure: Gastrointestinal
distress
Long term exposure: Liver or kidney damage
People with Wilson's Disease should consult
their personal doctor if the amount of copper in their water exceeds the
action level
|
Corrosion of household plumbing systems;
erosion of natural deposits
|
|
0.2
|
Nerve damage or thyroid problems
|
Discharge from steel/metal factories;
discharge from plastic and fertilizer factories
|
|
4.0
|
Bone disease (pain and tenderness of the
bones); Children may get mottled teeth
|
Water additive which promotes strong teeth;
erosion of natural deposits; discharge from fertilizer and aluminum factories
|
|
TT8;
Action Level=0.015 |
Infants and children: Delays in physical or
mental development; children could show slight deficits in attention span and
learning abilities
Adults: Kidney problems; high blood
pressure
|
Corrosion of household plumbing systems;
erosion of natural deposits
|
|
0.002
|
Kidney damage
|
Erosion of natural deposits; discharge from
refineries and factories; runoff from landfills and croplands
|
|
10
|
Infants below the age of six months who
drink water containing nitrate in excess of the MCL could become seriously
ill and, if untreated, may die. Symptoms include shortness of breath and
blue-baby syndrome.
|
Runoff from fertilizer use; leaching from
septic tanks, sewage; erosion of natural deposits
|
|
1
|
Infants below the age of six months who
drink water containing nitrite in excess of the MCL could become seriously
ill and, if untreated, may die. Symptoms include shortness of breath and
blue-baby syndrome.
|
Runoff from fertilizer use; leaching from
septic tanks, sewage; erosion of natural deposits
|
|
0.05
|
Hair or fingernail loss; numbness in
fingers or toes; circulatory problems
|
Discharge from petroleum refineries;
erosion of natural deposits; discharge from mines
|
|
0.002
|
Hair loss; changes in blood; kidney,
intestine, or liver problems
|
Leaching from ore-processing sites;
discharge from electronics, glass, and drug factories
|
Contaminant
|
Potential Health Effects
from Ingestion of Water
|
Sources of Contaminant in
Drinking Water
|
|
15 picocuries per Liter
(pCi/L)
|
Increased risk of cancer
|
Erosion of natural deposits of certain
minerals that are radioactive and may emit a form of radiation known as alpha
radiation
|
|
4 millirems per year
|
Increased risk of cancer
|
Decay of natural and man-made deposits of
certain minerals that are radioactive and
may emit forms of radiation known as photons and beta radiation
|
|
5 pCi/L
|
Increased risk of cancer
|
Erosion of natural deposits
|
|
30 ug/L
as of 12/08/03 |
Increased risk of cancer,
kidney toxicity
|
Erosion of natural
deposits
|
Notes:
1 Definitions:
1 Definitions:
·
Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) - The
highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water. MCLs are set
as close to MCLGs as feasible using the best available treatment technology and
taking cost into consideration. MCLs are enforceable standards.
·
Treatment Technique - A
required process intended to reduce the level of a contaminant in drinking
water.
2 Units
are in milligrams per liter (mg/L) unless otherwise noted. Milligrams per liter
are equivalent to parts per million.
3 EPA's
surface water treatment rules require systems using surface water or ground water under
the direct influence of surface water to (1) disinfect their water, and (2)
filter their water or meet criteria for avoiding filtration so that the
following contaminants are controlled at the following levels:
·
Cryptosporidium (as of1/1/02 for systems
serving >10,000 and 1/14/05 for systems serving <10,000) 99% removal.
·
Giardia lamblia: 99.9% removal/inactivation
·
Viruses: 99.99% removal/inactivation
·
Legionella: No limit, but EPA believes that
if Giardia and viruses are removed/inactivated, Legionella will also be
controlled.
·
Turbidity: At no time can turbidity
(cloudiness of water) go above 5 nephelolometric turbidity units (NTU); systems
that filter must ensure that the turbidity go no higher than 1 NTU (0.5 NTU for
conventional or direct filtration) in at least 95% of the daily samples in any
month. As of January 1, 2002, turbidity may never exceed 1 NTU, and must not
exceed 0.3 NTU in 95% of daily samples in any month.
·
HPC: No more than 500 bacterial colonies per
milliliter.
·
Long Term 1 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment
(Effective Date: January 14, 2005); Surface water systems or (GWUDI) systems
serving fewer than 10,000 people must comply with the applicable Long Term 1
Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule provisions (e.g. turbidity standards,
individual filter monitoring, Cryptosporidium removal requirements, updated
watershed control requirements for unfiltered systems).
·
Filter Backwash Recycling; The Filter
Backwash Recycling Rule requires systems that recycle to return specific
recycle flows through all processes of the system's existing conventional or
direct filtration system or at an alternate location approved by the state.
4 more
than 5.0% samples total coliform-positive in a month. (For water systems that
collect fewer than 40 routine samples per month, no more than one sample can be
total coliform-positive per month.) Every sample that has total coliform must
be analyzed for either fecal coliforms or E. coli if two consecutive
TC-positive samples, and one is also positive for E.coli fecal coliforms,
system has an acute MCL violation.
5 Fecal
coliform and E. coli are bacteria whose presence indicates that the water may
be contaminated with human or animal wastes. Disease-causing microbes
(pathogens) in these wastes can cause diarrhea, cramps, nausea, headaches, or
other symptoms. These pathogens may pose a special health risk for infants,
young children, and people with severely compromised immune systems.
6 Although
there is no collective MCLG for this contaminant group, there are individual
MCLGs for some of the individual contaminants:
·
Trihalomethanes: bromodichloromethane (zero);
bromoform (zero); dibromochloromethane (0.06 mg/L). Chloroform is regulated
with this group but has no MCLG.
·
Haloacetic acids: dichloroacetic acid (zero);
trichloroacetic acid (0.3 mg/L). Monochloroacetic acid, bromoacetic acid, and
dibromoacetic acid are regulated with this group but have no MCLGs.
7 MCLGs
were not established before the 1986 Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act.
Therefore, there is no MCLG for this contaminant.
Secondary Standard
|
||
0.05 to 0.2 mg/L
|
||
Chloride
|
250 mg/L
|
|
15 (color units)
|
||
Copper
|
1.0 mg/L
|
|
Corrosivity
|
noncorrosive
|
|
Fluoride
|
2.0 mg/L
|
|
Foaming Agents
|
0.5 mg/L
|
|
0.3 mg/L
|
||
0.05 mg/L
|
||
3 threshold odor number
|
||
6.5-8.5
|
||
0.10 mg/L
|
||
250 mg/L
|
||
500 mg/L
|
||
5 mg/L
|
||
8 Lead and copper are regulated by a Treatment
Technique that requires systems to control the corrosiveness of their water. If
more than 10% of tap water samples exceed the action level, water systems must
take additional steps. For copper, the action level is 1.3 mg/L, and for lead
is 0.015 mg/L.
9 Each
water system must certify, in writing, to the state (using third-party or
manufacturer's certification) that when acrylamide and epichlorohydrin are used
in drinking water systems, the combination (or product) of dose and monomer
level does not exceed the levels specified, as follows:
*Acrylamide
= 0.05% dosed at 1 mg/L (or equivalent)
* Epichlorohydrin
= 0.01% dosed at 20 mg/L (or equivalent)
National
Secondary Drinking Water Regulations (NSDWRs or secondary standards) are
non-enforceable guidelines regulating contaminants that may cause cosmetic
effects (such as skin or tooth discoloration) or aesthetic effects (such as
taste, odor, or color) in drinking water. EPA recommends secondary standards to
water systems but does not require systems to comply. However, states may
choose to adopt them as enforceable standards
Source: EPA 816-F-02-013
|
RELATED POSTS:
.
.
Carcinogenic
Chemicals In The Water Supply: Is Your Tap Water Safe?
.
.
PURICARE
INDUSTRIAL
ENTERPRISES
Water
Treatment
Systems
.
http://www.freedrinkingwater.com/water-education/water-contaminants-health-effects.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment