Tap Water-Miscarriage Link Found
Copyright 1998 The Associated Press
Associated Press (February 11, 1998)
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Pregnant women in their first trimester
who drink five or more glasses of cold tap water daily may
be at higher risk of miscarriage, according to a study of
California chlorinated drinking water.
The heightened risk is linked to exposure to a contaminant
found in chlorinated water in a majority of municipal water
systems nationwide. The chemical -- trihalomethane (TTHM) --
forms when chlorine reacts with acids from plant material.
Chlorine helps purify water and prevents bacterial
infections. TTHMs have been associated with increased cancer
risk, at least in animals, and federal regulators have
limited the amount allowed in drinking water.
The study, led by California health department investigators
Kirsten Waller and Shanna Swann, examined the records of
5,144 pregnant women from the Fontana, Santa Clara and
Walnut Creek areas.
The study, which will be published in the Feb. 18 issue of
the journal Epidemiology, found that women who drank five or
more glasses of tap water per day with at least 75
micrograms per liter of TTHMs had an increased risk of
miscarriage.
Their risk was calculated at 15.7 percent, compared with 9.5
percent among women who received low exposure. Only about 2
percent of the women were exposed to the highest risk
levels, meaning they consumed five or more glasses with at
least 75 micrograms per liter.
All the women drank water that met state and federal
drinking standards.
``You do run a risk if drinking unboiled water,'' said S.
David Freeman, the general manager of the Los Angeles
Department of Water and Power, America's largest municipal
utility.
``Nobody knows how high,'' he said. ``The most practical
thing that we've come up with is to tell women in that
category to boil some water and put it in the
refrigerator.''
The Environmental Protection Agency allows up to 100
micrograms of TTHMs per liter. The agency plans to reduce
that standard to 80 micrograms in November.
State and federal officials said the study is not definitive
and more tests are planned. It is part of an effort by the
EPA to balance the need for protection against microbes --
such as those that cause dysentery and cholera -- with the
need to keep the dangers of disinfection itself to a
minimum.
At the Metropolitan Water District, which supplies most of
Southern California outside Los Angeles, officials said the
average levels of TTHM are well below those that triggered
concern in the study.
But within Los Angeles, the average concentration in tap
water exceeds that level. State health officials advised
women to heed their doctors' recommendations on fluid
intake, but offered other steps.
For example, carbon-filtered tap water can be left standing
in the refrigerator for several hours or water can be boiled
for a minute and then left to cool. But the study was not
large enough to allow researchers to calculate precise
effects.
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the author.
Copyright © 1998 Steven J. Milloy.
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