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  4. Pharmaceutical and personal care products in the seawater: Mini review
 
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Pharmaceutical and personal care products in the seawater: Mini review

Source
Emerging Aquatic Contaminants One Health Framework for Risk Assessment and Remediation in the Post Covid 19 Anthropocene
Date Issued
2023-01-01
Author(s)
Bhagat, Chandrashekhar
Kumar, Manish  
DOI
10.1016/B978-0-323-96002-1.00013-4
Abstract
Growing industrialization and urbanization along the coastal regions are the potential sources of emerging contaminants that escalate the concentration of contaminants such as pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCPs), microplastic (MPs), pesticides, herbicides, and endocrine-disrupting compounds. Among all the PPCPs are most frequently found in the water environment worldwide. Threat of PPCPs contamination in coastal water increases in the developing world as the sensitive marine ecosystem is more vulnerable to these contaminants. The present chapter summarizes the reported PPCPs in the coastal water around the world and their sources, fate, and transport in the marine environment. The concentration of PPCPs reported in the different studies varies from below the detection limit to 13,600 ng/L in the coastal water. The seven priorities of PPCPs (sulfamethoxazole (SMX), sulfamethazine (SMN), oxytetracycline (OTC), and ofloxacin (OFL), anhydro-erythromycin (ERY-H2O), roxithromycin (ROX), and caffeine (CAF)) are primarily widely distributed in Asian countries compared to Europe, North America, and Australia. Global PPCPs contamination generally reflected site and region specific distributions, suggesting varying usages and sources across the region and country. The most dominant anthropogenic factors to PPCPs contamination include domestic/industrial wastewater discharge, the gross product of meat, pharmaceuticals used in poultry/horticulture, eggs and milk, and gross aquatic product.
Unpaywall
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/26996
Subjects
Coastal regions | Contaminants | Fate | PPCPs | Seawater | Transport
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