Once again I have the honour of welcoming my good friend Arthur's words onto this blog. In the near future I will be interviewing Arthur on the Living the Thirteen Moons Podcast. If you wish to know more about him, check out the Delta Institute of Natural History, or his Youtube Channel. The reason I wanted this on my blog is three-fold. The first and foremost reason is because I care about water quality, for both us and the environment itself. This reason is enough for me to want this sort of knowledge on here. However I also work at a wonderful program called TRACKS Youth Outreach, which focuses on teaching Native and non-Native youth about science, especially environmental science. You can find us on Facebook here. We have been teaching a lot about water health and what our people in Western culture can do to protect the water that is on this big, beautiful planet. This is another good reason to pass on this information regarding water health. Finally, with the recent proceedings here in Canada, we have lost a lot of fundamental protection for our lakes, rivers and streams. It is up to us now as citizens to do our part to take care of our waterways. This again is a fundamental reason as to why this article is vital for our continuing survival, not to mention our current environment's. So a big big miigwetch to Arthur Haines, and without further adieu...
How Being Healthy Protects Drinking Water
First, let’s build awareness of the issue: pharmaceutical drugs (among
other chemicals) are routinely detected in public drinking water
supplies here in the United States. One of the primary sources of these
drugs is people--specifically, those who use pharmaceutical drugs.
When you use a drug (prescription or over-the-counter) some of that drug
passes un-metabolized through your body
and is excreted into the septic system. Those drugs then enter the
ground water or sewer systems (depending on where you live) and
ultimately end up in the bodies of wild animals or in the bodies of
people (especially if you live in an area with waste water treatment
facilities that recycle water for drinking). So, to summarize this
paragraph, many people in metropolitan areas (and some people in rural
areas) are being exposed to low, constant doses of antibiotic,
antifertility, pain-relieving, and mood-altering medications. Even
aquifers have been found to be contaminated by synthetic medicines.
The amount of these drugs in the public water system is low (it would
be described as trace). That has led many water suppliers to claim
there is no harm caused by the presence of these compounds. However,
no test has shown that exposure is safe (especially in the long run) and
some recent research finds that harm is being caused. Remember that
most medicine is to be taken for a short time and then discontinued.
But when you get low doses in your drinking water, you are constantly
exposed to a myriad of chemicals--in one review, 63 drugs were found
during testing in watersheds around cities and 56 of those were in the
public water supply. These low dose medicines in the water have been
shown to slow growth of human embryonic kidney cells, speed cancer cell
proliferation, and alter blood cell activity. Further, there is
evidence that adding chlorine, a common component of urban drinking
water, makes the pharmaceutical drugs more toxic. There is no doubt
that some wildlife species are being affected. For example, male fish
in some areas are being feminized.
So, what do you do about
this? Well, you may decide to drink only spring water. That would
protect you and your family (note: your home filtration system was
likely not designed to remove trace amounts of pharmaceutical drugs).
But what about those people who can’t afford bottled water? And what
about the other-than-human-persons we share this world with? This is a
case where we need to be unselfish. Drugs in the water supply are going
to come back to harm us. What if your child lives or one day moves to a
metropolitan area and becomes exposed to these compounds? The solution
for this dilemma is that we need to be healthier. We need to ingest
fewer drugs, wash and adorn ourselves with more eco-friendly products
(because those end up in the water as well), and even consider what our
toilet paper is doing to the world (recycled paper contains Bisphenol-A,
an endocrine disruptor, which also ends up in the water supply).
Regardless of your diet and lifestyle, most people will become ill and
be in need of medicine at some point in their life. This is where I
encourage people to turn to natural products, even better, those
medicines that they gather from the landscapes around their homes.
These plants and fungi are ever present in the ecosystem. They are
eaten by animals (who excrete them into the environment). They decay in
the fall, releasing minerals and various natural compounds. They are
all around us, in the leaf litter and in the ground water, and anyone
who spends time in the outdoors is constantly exposed to them. Based on
what we know, constant exposure to wild plant phytochemicals has a role
in generating health (so long as toxins are avoided). Hypothetically,
if I were to ingest staghorn sumac for an infection, I would ultimately
be excreting chemicals that are already found in the watershed (where I
gathered them in the first place). There is no introduction of new or
synthetic compounds. No need to gain resistance to novel drugs. No
need to worry about the secondary impacts.
Being healthy is the
primary way we protect our water supplies from pharmaceutical drugs.
Using natural medicine is the second line of defense. Of course, the
over-arching principle here is that we need to be aware of what our
actions do to the world (and the many ways that poor health hurts
everyone, not just the person afflicted with the ailment). Remember:
humans did not weave the web of life, they are merely a strand in it.
Whatever humans do to the web, they do to themselves (adapted from Chief
Seattle).