APHL EVALI response spurred by strong communication

Person vaping

Whether it be a disease outbreak, a natural disaster or a devastating lung condition, regular, responsive communication drives response to public health emergencies. In the summer of 2019, with cases of E-cigarette, or Vaping, Product Use-Associated Lung Injury (EVALI) steadily rising, partners at federal, state and local health agencies, health associations, hospitals, poison control centers and other players were in constant contact.

APHL Director of Environmental Health Julianne Nassif recalls, “At the height of the EVALI response, I spent most of my day on conference calls with [the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), US Food and Drug Association, Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists] and member labs. It was many long hours fortified by a lot of caffeine, but these calls kept us up-to-date and on-task in a rapidly evolving situation.”

EVALI Community Links Members, Partners

APHL facilitated the exchange of time-sensitive information by creating an EVALI community of practice, linking member laboratories, federal agencies and others working on the issue. Building upon relationships developed through various laboratory networks, the group held conference calls to brainstorm ideas and discuss surveillance reports, testing methodology and legal considerations. Experts in testing for e-liquids in vaporized products joined the calls to explain methods unfamiliar to many public health laboratories. The community also served as a nexus for rapid distribution of sampling guidance and analytical methods to scientists working on analysis of EVALI case-related specimens and products. For example, CDC deployed standards for collection of bronchial lavage specimens through the EVALI community. The community continues to hold routine conference calls to exchange notes on recent findings.

APHL also polled member laboratories to solicit their advice on resources and services needed for EVALI response. They returned six recommendations:

  1. Elevation of the EVALI response to an agency-wide level
  2. Addition of experts in environmental and occupational medicine and in epidemiology
  3. Guidance for specimen collection and storage
  4. A template for submitting data to CDC
  5. Extending the time allotted for collection of samples
  6. Building non-targeted testing capability for 1000s of chemicals and providing technical support to assist states with chemical analysis

When APHL forwarded these recommendations to CDC’s Emergency Operations Center, the response was prompt: CDC would provide almost all that APHL had requested.

Existing Relationships Facilitate Response

So why did APHL laboratories and partners communicate so well during the peak of the EVALI outbreak? In short, because they knew each other. By participating in the Laboratory Response Network for Chemical Threats (LRN-C), the National Biomonitoring Network, Opioid Biosurveillance and the APHL Community of Practice for Cannabis Testing, they knew each other personally and trusted one another. Through these same networks, they had also built relationships with hospital staff, poison control specialists, epidemiologists and forensics scientists. In an emergency, these connections proved invaluable.

Learn More

A plenary session about how strong communications enhanced the laboratory response to the EVALI outbreak had been planned for the APHL 2020 Annual Conference, which unfortunately has been canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. There are plans underway to turn the session into a webinar, so keep an eye out on the APHL Webinars page for more information.

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Lab Culture Ep. 20: 20 Years of the Laboratory Response Network

Stefan Saravia and Maureen Sullivan at the Minnesota Public Health Laboratory

This year marks 20 years since the inception of the Laboratory Response Network (LRN). Founded by APHL, CDC and the FBI, the LRN exists to protect the public from biological and chemical threats. How did the LRN get its start? And how has it evolved over the past 20 years? This episode of Lab Culture features an interview with two public health laboratory scientists and LRN experts.

Listen here or wherever you get your podcasts:

Maureen “Moe” Sullivan
Emergency Preparedness and Response Laboratory Supervisor
Public Health Laboratory, Minnesota Department of Health

Stefan Saravia
Biomonitoring and Emerging Contaminants Unit Supervisor
Public Health Laboratory, Minnesota Department of Health

Links:

Minnesota Laboratory Emergency Preparedness
About the Laboratory Response Network (APHL.org)
The Laboratory Response Network Partners in Preparedness (CDC.gov)
What is biomonitoring? (Video)
“Pine County man charged with government center threats, more” (StarTribune)

 

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New Lab Matters: The promise and challenge of newborn screening in 2019

New Lab Matters cover depicts a newborn baby

Newborn screening is a public health success story, ongoing for 56 years. On the one hand, new treatment and laboratory testing options open up the possibility of expanded screening panels. On the other hand, testing laboratories and follow-up providers are generally under-resourced and straining to keep pace with growing workloads. But as our feature article shows, scientists are working diligently to improve the accuracy and precision of existing tests and to bring on new disorders, even as they continue the high-stakes work of screening tens of thousands of infants a year.

Here are just a few of this issue’s highlights:

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Four Corners States Biomonitoring Collaborative: Leveraging lab capacity toward regional health concerns

Four Corners States Biomonitoring Collaborative: Leveraging lab capacity toward regional health concerns | www.APHLblog.org

By Kim Krisberg

2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid—otherwise known as 2,4-D—is the active ingredient in a variety of weed killers and one of the most common, widely used herbicides in the world. Studies in lab animals have found that high doses of 2,4-D are associated with negative health effects. Research on human exposure is more of a mixed bag.

According to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, it doesn’t appear that contact with small amounts of 2,4-D is harmful to people. Some studies on workers with relatively high exposure rates, such as professional herbicide applicators, have identified a possible link to cancers of the lymph system. Other studies found no strong evidence linking 2,4-D to cancers. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says there’s not enough evidence to either refute or support 2,4-D as a human carcinogen, while the International Agency for Research on Cancer has deemed 2,4-D as “possibly carcinogenic” based on “inadequate evidence.” In other words, we need more research.

One place where that research is happening is inside the public health labs of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah, where a collaborative known as the Four Corners States Biomonitoring Consortium (4CSBC) hopes to gather new insights into environmental exposures that could impact people’s health. With funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National Biomonitoring Program, 4CSBC began its work in 2014, building on the previous efforts of the Rocky Mountain Biomonitoring Consortium, of which all four states had been a member. The collaborative’s mission is to generate the data on environmental conditions and contaminants that can inform protective public health actions. It’s also an exercise in optimizing public health lab capacity toward regional environmental health risks and shared concerns regarding air and water quality.

“I think this is one of the most relevant grant-funded projects we do,” said Eric Petty, chemistry program manager within the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment’s Laboratory Services Division and his state’s lead for 4CSBC. “It produces so much meaningful data and it’s pretty unlimited regarding the number of studies we can design. There’s so much out there that hasn’t been looked at.”

The consortium is focused on three main studies: heavy metal exposure from private well drinking water; pesticide, herbicide and phthalates exposure; and the San Luis Valley (Colorado) Children’s Study, which assesses hazardous chemical exposure among children ages 3 to 13. In each state, public health labs partner with environmental health workers and epidemiologists to find residents who want to take part, collect water and urine samples for testing, and eventually reconnect with residents to discuss results and any health-protective recommendations. The 4CSBC labs spread out the testing responsibilities according to capacity, so as to not burden any one state—for example, every state does its own metals testing; New Mexico and Utah test for metabolites of pyrethroids, a group of chemicals found in certain pesticides; Arizona handles all the testing for phthalate metabolites; and Colorado tests for 2,4-Dichlorophenol and 2,5-Dichlorophenol, the latter of which is found in household products. However, testing duties can change depending on circumstances and capacity. Testing results are interpreted, in part, by using baseline data from CDC’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

“We have similar geological settings, we all have a legacy of mining in heavy metals, we’re agricultural states, our populations can be sparse, we have common problems regarding arsenic and pesticides,” said Sanwat Chaudhuri, PhD, 4CSBC’s principal investigator and scientific advisor for chemical and environmental services at the Utah Public Health Laboratory. “It just makes more sense that we work together to try to solve our problems.”

To date, Chaudhuri said the consortium has tested more than 900 urine samples and about 500 water samples. Labs work closely with their state colleagues in epidemiology and environmental health—or in Utah and New Mexico, with CDC-funded participants in the National Environmental Public Health Tracking Program—in determining where in the states to focus their biomonitoring efforts and what kind of data gaps the consortium can help fill. Chaudhuri added that the consortium leverages its unique work to help particularly vulnerable communities reduce their risk of harmful exposure. 4CSBC’s focus on private well drinking water is a good example of that. Because such water often goes unregulated, 4CSBC can help alert residents to potential contaminants, while collecting the data that allow health officials to measure changes in environmental risk.

If lab technicians detect a particularly high concentration of a contaminant—like naturally occurring uranium that can seep into private well water—residents are notified and offered guidance about how to fix or mitigate the problem. In some instances, Chaudhuri said, local health officials are engaged and notified. 4CSBC teams regularly share data with each other, evaluate their progress and plan for the future during monthly phone calls and at two face-to-face meetings each year.

“We couldn’t have stretched [the CDC biomonitoring funds] across four states if wasn’t for our collaborations,” Chaudhuri said. “We get so much in-kind support from our environmental health and tracking partners—who else can better appreciate the need for biomonitoring data?”

On the ground, the biomonitoring collaborative not only hopes to offer new insights, but to boost capacity for more traditional public health responsibilities, such as safeguarding drinking water quality. For example, in New Mexico, about 20 percent of residents depend on drinking water sources—like private wells—that aren’t regulated by either federal or state oversight. At the same time, said Heidi Krapfl, MS, chief of the New Mexico Department of Health’s Environmental Health Epidemiology Bureau, the state’s geology means private well water drinkers may be at heightened risk of harmful arsenic and uranium exposures. Urine uranium concentrations above a certain threshold are already a notifiable condition in New Mexico.

To better understand that risk, New Mexico’s 4CSBC team partners closely with the state’s environmental health tracking program to collect and analyze water samples. To date, according to Barbara Toth, PhD, MS, epidemiologist supervisor at the New Mexico Department of Health, the biomonitoring effort in New Mexico has collected about 150 household water samples for heavy metal testing and just more than 200 urine samples for heavy metal and phthalate testing. If researchers find troubling levels in any of the specimens, they or their partners follow up with residents. So far, Toth said they haven’t detected any levels that would be deemed harmful.

“Tracking is about exposure and health outcomes,” Toth said, “and biomonitoring is the method by which we understand that exposure.”

Krapfl added: “Those three legs of the stool—tracking, biomonitoring and private well water testing—provide a strong foundation for taking supporting public health actions in the state. You really need all three.”

One of the 4CSBC’s main projects—the San Luis Valley Children’s Study—is focused on a specific community of children in Colorado. According to Petty, the 4CSBC lead in Colorado, the area has a particularly shallow water table and has a history of agricultural use. To get a clearer picture of the risk, 4SCBC is partnering with a researcher from the University of Colorado who’s already begun studying children’s exposure in the San Luis Valley. The researcher conducts the field work and collects samples, while the Colorado public health lab does the testing—to date, Petty said the lab has tested more than 200 urine samples and 100 water samples.

“The consortium is a great way to consolidate resources,” Petty said. “Ultimately, there’s so much information these studies can provide in the future.”

Well water quality is a priority issue in Arizona too, according to Jason Mihalic, chief of the Chemistry Office at the Arizona Department of Health Services and the state’s principal 4CSBC investigator. Any Arizona resident who uses well water can take part in the biomonitoring effort. But to sweeten the deal—and attract as many participants as possible—the Arizona lab offers a free water analysis for 19 metals using an EPA-approved method. The Arizona 4CSBC effort is also partnering with existing well water programs at the University of Arizona to spread word about the biomonitoring effort—for example, news of the biomonitoring testing even made it onto a local master gardener listserv®.

For many of the compounds included in 4CSBC testing—such as pyrethroid insecticides used to reduce risk of tick-borne diseases like Rocky Mountain spotted fever or the plastic chemicals known as phthalates that are now ubiquitous in our environment—biomonitoring will produce the first regional baseline data available, Mihalic noted.

And more precise data means public health can be even more effective in protecting communities against potentially harmful exposures.

“I love biomonitoring,” Mihalic said. “It’s a wonderful way for the public health lab and epidemiology to work together in tackling real-world problems.”

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New Lab Matters: Biomonitoring

New Lab Matters: Biomonitoring | www.APHLblog.org

In the 1970s, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) showed that gasoline lead was a major exposure for children and adults—a huge finding that would not have been known otherwise. Today NHANES provides a critical baseline for national background levels of exposure to other chemicals, but state efforts to test and document local, possibly elevated exposures to the new “alphabet soup” of PFOAs and PFOSs have been little funded and lagging. As our feature article shows, public health laboratories aim to change that through new technologies and the establishment of the new National Biomonitoring Network.

Here are just a few of this issue’s highlights:

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APHL: US needs an environmental health surveillance system to prevent crises like Flint

APHL: US needs an environmental health surveillance system to prevent crises like Flint | www.APHLblog.org

By Megan Latshaw, director, environmental health, APHL

The public health crisis caused by inordinately high levels of lead contamination in Flint, Michigan is inexcusable, urgent and not as uncommon as many may believe. Over the last decade funding for environmental health services and testing has declined at the local, state and federal levels. The crisis in Flint serves as a critical reminder that our nation needs to reexamine and refocus its environmental health system, policies and practices.

The United States lacks a coordinated environmental health surveillance system at the local and state levels similar to the systems we have for infectious disease detection. The failure to establish and utilize such a system has allowed for crises like the one in Flint.

Did you know that most public health laboratories test air, soil and water as well as people for contaminants? In fact, many of these laboratories also certify other labs in their state to do similar testing. So why aren’t we making better use of these functions?

When there is an emergency, the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Water Laboratory Alliance (WLA) serves as a network of laboratories willing to provide support by sharing supplies or even performing testing. However, the WLA has not been activated in the Flint response. If it was, it would provide access to 140 laboratories across the country that could offer support.

Additionally, most public health laboratories receive funding from the Laboratory Response Network for Chemical Threats (LRN-C) to test blood and urine for contaminants. To date, however, the LRN-C has not been activated to respond to the Flint disaster. If it was, it could provide the ability to test thousands of samples using high-quality CDC-approved methods.

During non-emergencies, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) measures more than 250 chemicals in blood of US residents, but the data cannot be used to answer questions at the state or community levels. In order to produce such data, local and state public health laboratories need to conduct biomonitoring (looking at whether and how environmental contaminants are being absorbed into people’s bodies) as part of routine public health surveillance.

Currently CDC funds nine states to build biomonitoring capability and capacity, as well efforts to create a National Biomonitoring Network of laboratories. To move toward a true environmental health surveillance system, this funding needs to be expanded to include an additional 10 laboratories.

When fully implemented, the National Biomonitoring Network will harmonize the way local and state agencies measure chemical exposures in people, allowing collaboration among laboratories in order to build efficiency and comparability of data across the country. In the future, a data repository will allow analysis of trends over time and within a specific geographical area. This network will be a significant step toward establishing an environmental health surveillance system in the US. It would mean that communities concerned about potential chemical exposure would have better answers and policymakers would have better data to help them make better decisions.

Finally, investing in the Environmental Health Tracking Network would bring us even closer to an environmental health surveillance system. This network provides access to data on environmental hazards (such as lead in water), exposure data (such as blood lead levels) and health effects (such as birth defects). However, the Environmental Health Tracking Network only includes 26 local and state health departments. Additional resources are needed to build out the system to better identify environmental health issues before they become large, significant problems. A fully-functioning network would lead to a better understanding of patterns related to certain birth defects and the impact of pollution on asthma and other respiratory illnesses.

In order to prevent another crisis like the one in Flint, we must prioritize environmental health as part of our broader commitment to public health. APHL feels strongly that every citizen has a right to clean water, no matter where they live. Our government has a duty to provide this. The US needs an environmental health surveillance system, and we see the public health laboratories as a vital component of such a system.

APHL: US needs an environmental health surveillance system to prevent crises like Flint | www.APHLblog.org

Responding to the Animas River disaster: Who’s testing what?

by Megan Latshaw, director, Environmental Health, APHL

It was Saturday morning and my energetic six-year-old daughter was occupied for a moment, so I had a few seconds of quiet to scroll through my Twitter newsfeed. This photo of Colorado’s Animas River caught my eye and I immediately thought, “That has to be photoshopped.” I clicked the link and saw it wasn’t.

Responding to the Animas River disaster: Who’s testing what? | www.APHLblog.org“What’s going on?” I thought, as she bounded back in the room, tackling me with her typical exuberance. I squirmed up from underneath her and quickly retweeted the image, sensing it was something important.

Later the nation would learn that an EPA contractor accidentally released 3 million gallons of mine waste including metals such as lead, mercury and arsenic into the river, turning it the bright orange color that originally looked (and kind of still does) photoshopped despite being very real. (Photo by Josh Stephenson / Durango Herald)

As the story unfolded, the details revealed the seriousness of the situation. I decided to reach out to the state public health and environmental laboratories in the impacted states: Colorado, New Mexico and Utah. Were they receiving requests to test the water and soil (AKA sediment)? Were they overwhelmed? Did they plan to look for contaminants in people who may have been exposed?

This type of event sends public health and environmental laboratories in impacted states into emergency response mode. That means putting normal day-to-day work aside (and possibly even day-to-day personal life if the lab has to move to a 24/7 shift work). This sets the stage for one of the biggest challenges seen in laboratories during many emergency responses such as this one: prioritization. In this case, sample submitters went from characterizing samples as either priority 1 or 2, to labeling all samples as priority 1. So instead of being able to put some samples on hold (priority 2) in order to address the priority 1 samples, all samples must be addressed as soon as possible. This presents a challenge to an already stressed laboratory.

In an effort to assist with lab-to-lab emergency response coordination, APHL held a conference call on August 19. Here is what we heard:

– Testing was being done by multiple entities including public health labs, commercial labs and EPA.
– The Colorado public health laboratory saw more than 100 samples from surface water, sediments, irrigation canals and private well water within the first two weeks. As of the 24th, they expect to return to normal surveillance levels.
– The New Mexico public health laboratory saw between 40 and 60 river water samples submitted for a full range of testing including metals. By the time we spoke, technicians had completed work on most of the samples, sending about 500 results over the period of about one week. The laboratory expects to do biomonitoring (looking for chemicals in blood or urine).
– The Utah public health laboratory had not receive any water samples yet but they anticipated receiving some from privately owned water wells along with human specimens. With those expected samples, they will look for metals in the local population as part of a previously planned biomonitoring study by the health department.

Fortunately, the public health labs in the states affected by this spill had the ability to test not only soil and water samples, but also to look for exposure to pollution in humans. This capability is largely thanks to the testing foundation put in place by the Laboratory Response Network for Chemical Threats (LRN-C). The LRN-C, which began as a network of public health laboratories with special skills and equipment to use in the event of a chemical terrorist attack, has expanded its priorities over the last decade to include assisting in response to accidents involving chemicals. Without investments in the LRN-C, there would not have been instruments or trained personnel to do the biomonitoring that is planned.

The labs responded just as they should have – they were quick and thorough in both testing and reporting. Thanks to their hard work, we know that concentrations in the water have gone down, but we need to know more; we need to understand what potential increases in exposure mean to the people who swam, drank or otherwise came into contact with the contaminated water. Biomonitoring will help do that. My colleagues and I will be watching closely and continuing to encourage the use of biomonitoring during environmental emergencies just like this.

I keep coming back to my six-year-old and how I would feel wondering if she had been exposed to high levels of metals. If I lived in one of the affected communities, I would want to know.

If you live in a community impacted by environmental contamination, and you think a laboratory might be able to answer some of your questions, please visit APHL’s Meeting Community Needs site.

 

 

 

Healthier Communities Thanks to the National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network

By Michelle M. Forman, senior specialist, media, APHL

Your state’s childhood cancer rates are within normal – but what about your community that was once home to a factory?

People suddenly became ill after having a lakeside picnic too close to idling boats – how prevalent is carbon monoxide poisoning from these lesser known sources and does the public understand their risk?

Public health wants to understand the impact of extremely hot temperatures on people’s health – how can they get gather and analyze hospital data so they can properly inform the public of their risks and necessary precautions?

Healthier Communities Thanks to the National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network | www.APHLblog.orgThe National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network can provide answers to all of these questions.

Before CDC launched the Tracking Network in 2002, environmental health data may have been collected at the county or state level but not usually at the community level; and oftentimes public health practitioners, healthcare providers and researchers weren’t sharing data to support one another. Tracking programs around the US are gathering data that better illustrates what may be happening within a particular city, neighborhood and/or demographic; that information is then made available to researchers, healthcare providers and public health practitioners in the form of maps or well-organized databases leading to faster responses.

Here are some real life examples of how the Tracking Network has answered questions like the ones listed above:

Winchester, Massachusetts parents were becoming increasingly concerned about the sediment left in a popular park by an adjacent river’s flood waters. In the same park, an herbicide was used that added to concerns about the park’s safety for kids. Were these things likely to cause childhood cancer? At the request of these citizens, the state tracking program began to investigate. They looked closely at the herbicide and the contaminants from the river, and they reviewed statewide childhood cancer data and compared it to rates in the immediate community. The tracking program’s final report showed that Winchester’s childhood cancer rate was similar to statewide trends – neither the flooding river’s sediment nor the herbicide were causing higher rates of cancer. While this information was reassuring, the Town of Winchester went one step further by deepening the channel of the river to prevent flooding.

At an indoor pool party in a small Kansas town, more than two dozen kids suddenly became ill with headaches and nausea caused by carbon monoxide from the pool’s heater. Following this incident (and a few others), the Kansas tracking program developed an educational program to inform residents of the lesser-known – but equally dangerous – sources of carbon monoxide. The state saw a decrease in carbon monoxide poisonings after the educational program was implemented. Additionally, Kansas is considering regulatory changes that would require hospitals to report all cases of carbon monoxide poisoning giving the tracking program valuable information as they continue to monitor carbon monoxide incidents.

Extreme heat events (aka, heat waves) cause hundreds of hospitalizations and emergency room visits in Minnesota every year. The tracking program analyzed data on hospitalizations and deaths to gain a better understand of high-risk groups, and compiled this data into maps. Using this information, they identified new populations that hadn’t previously been considered high-risk. Health agencies are now able to use this data to develop more targeted prevention and response systems before and during extreme heat events.

 

Biomonitoring and the Public Health Laboratory: Everything You Want to Know

Biomonitoring and the Public Health Laboratory: Everything You Want to Know | www.aphlblog.org

Simply stated, biomonitoring allows public health practitioners to understand whether environmental contaminants are being absorbed into people’s bodies. Given improvements in technology; the capabilities and expertise that now exist in public health laboratories; and the increasing public demand for more information about chemical exposures, biomonitoring is poised to become an integral component of public health practice.

APHL proudly recognizes all of the great work public health laboratories are doing to advance the practice of biomonitoring. We have made it a priority to share these biomonitoring achievements through a variety of channels.

Just in case you missed these great resources and stories, they are here:

Free Webinars

Blog posts and Lab Matters Articles

Fact Sheets

Other resources

Tell us what you think: EH@aphl.org.

 

Arsenic in the water: Are filters and bottled water enough protection?

By Melissa Murray Jordan, senior environmental epidemiologist, Bureau of Epidemiology, Division of Disease Control and Health Protection, Florida Department of Health

Arsenic in the water: Are filters and bottled water enough protection? | www.aphlblog.org

Private wells in many central Florida counties have been found to contain levels of arsenic above the federal maximum containment level (MCL) of 10 μg/L (micrograms per liter). Knowing it is present is important to the public’s health; but how serious is this? Even exposure to low amounts of arsenic can potentially lead to an abnormal heart rhythm, damage to blood vessels, and a tingling sensation in hands and feet. Inorganic arsenic, the type in this water, is a carcinogen when consumed over many years. High levels of exposure to arsenic may lead to death. To address this known contamination, the Florida Safe Water Restoration Program provided filters or bottled water to households with arsenic levels in private wells between 10 μg/L and 50 μg/L. In partnership with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, the Florida Department of Health (FDOH) decided to test the effectiveness of this program as well as explore any further impact of the contaminated water on residents living in areas of concern.

The study targeted Hernando County where nearly 400 of the 1,200 wells tested had elevated arsenic levels. This time, scientists wanted to understand if residents who weren’t drinking unfiltered well water (people who were drinking bottled water or using a filter in their homes) were still ingesting unsafe levels of arsenic through other unfiltered tap water in the home. It is widely known that arsenic exposure often occurs from drinking water, but what about exposure to water in other ways? What about brushing your teeth with unfiltered water? Or when cooking with unfiltered water?

A critical initial step of this project was forming a workgroup with representatives from many disciplines to inform various steps of the study:

  • Environmental specialists to provide background information on areas of known arsenic contamination in the state and details on the private well testing database;
  • Epidemiologists to provide guidance on the study design and sample size;
  • Laboratorians for developing the protocol for collecting, shipping and testing the water and urine samples;
  • Toxicologists to interpret the risk of arsenic exposure;
  • And communications experts to develop press releases, frequently asked questions and coordinate media.

Funding from CDC’s Environmental Public Health Tracking program allowed the state to engage these experts and ensured a high-quality study.

From April through July of 2013, 360 individuals from 166 households participated in the study. Nearly 50% of the participants were from control households: households with well water arsenic levels below 8 μg/L (below MCL). The other half were classified as case households: households with arsenic levels exceeding 10 μg/L (at or above the MCL). Participants provided urine and water samples, and completed a questionnaire on water consumption, dietary history and other possible sources of arsenic exposures. Water and urine samples were sent to the public health laboratory in Jacksonville, Florida for analysis of total arsenic.

The majority of case households (59.8%) reported bottled water as their most common source of drinking water, and 47.5% reported using bottled water for cooking. However, the majority of case households reported using unfiltered well water to brush their teeth (88.7%).

In many biomonitoring studies, only adults participate. This study also included children. Simply because of their size, a small amount of a chemical can have a larger impact in a child than the same amount in an adult. Scientists felt it was valuable to look at a range of people without omitting the smallest members of the community. Additionally, children tend to have different behaviors from the adults in their homes. For example, they may take baths rather than showers – and kids may be more likely to ingest that bath water. Fortunately, no children in this study were found to have elevated levels of inorganic arsenic.

Results: Residents using filtered or bottled water for drinking were not at an increased risk for arsenic exposure through other unfiltered household water sources.

The distribution of filters and bottled water was helping to prevent residents from exposure to arsenic. While testing for contaminants in the wells was an important first step to understanding the problem, biomonitoring provided a more complete picture of the full impact on a population. This was obviously good news to the residents and researchers alike.