Once seen as threatening little more than a stomachache,
microscopic waterborne bugs are increasingly turning deadly
forcing health officials to shift priorities as they try to make drinking
water safe for a changing population.
For years, the Environmental Protection Agency has focused
on potential cancer-causing chemicals as the main drinking water threat.
But now water agencies and federal health officials concede the more
immediate concern is waterborne bacteria, parasites and viruses
with names like cryptosporidium and girardia some of which were
largely ignored, or even unknown, until a few years ago.
For the past week, people in the nation's capital have
been reluctant to drink their water. Boiling orders were issued, then
canceled. Finally, officials poured more chlorine into the system.
The reason: signs that the city's aging water pipes are full of bacteria.
The urgency surrounding waterborne pathogens comes because more and
more Americans are susceptible to the illnesses they cause, health
experts say. "Most of these organisms have been around for eons, but
we're just now beginning to detect them," said Dennis Juranek, an
expert in parasitic diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in Atlanta. Only when people began reporting severe illnesses
and even dying from such bugs did they emerge on health officials'
radar screens as important, he said.
In most healthy people, the damage is limited to a brief
bout of intestinal discomfort, sometimes even mistaken for the flu.
But for those suffering from AIDS or HIV infection, cancer patients
and the elderly whose immune systems cannot ward off bacterial
attack drinking water can become deadly, say health officials.
Some of the emerging pathogens are still mostly a mystery
to health experts. Some, like cryptosporidium, aren't stymied by chlorine,
the most successful and widely used disinfectant in drinking water.
According to CDC estimates, between 900 and 1,000 people a year die
and another million people become sick from microbial illnesses from
drinking water. Other estimates have put deaths as high as 1,200 and
estimated illnesses at more than 7 million, many never reported to
doctors.
Nevertheless, at federal agencies and in Congress, microbial
problems were "put on the back shelf" until just the last few years,
said Diane VanDe Hei, Executive Director of the Association of Metropolitan
Water Agencies. The health threat crystallized in 1993 when 100 people
most of them elderly or otherwise susceptible to illness died
in Milwaukee in an outbreak of cryptosporidium in the city's drinking
water. More than 400 others got sick.
"It is a serious issue, an emerging threat. We think
it needs significant focus," said EPA Administrator Carol Browner.
Her agency already has shifted some of its focus in dealing with pollutants
and plans a five-year, $50 million effort to learn more about microbial
pollution. But the problem is likely to become more severe before
it gets better as susceptible populations grow and scientists discover
yet more pathogens. "Waterborne disease outbreaks caused by protozoan
parasites appear to be on the
rise," concludes C.R. Sterling, a researcher at the University of
Arizona. "One can't help but wonder how many more organisms with the
potential for waterborne transmission await discovery."
Immune to chlorine, parasites such as cryptosporidium
must be trapped by filtration, but they often pass through existing
filtration systems. If they are detected, about the only answer is
to warn vulnerable users to boil their water. There are no easy, or
inexpensive answers, say health and water industry experts. The real
solution is to reduce the bacteria and parasites in the lakes and
rivers that supply drinking water, say many water treatment officials
and environmentalists.
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