Pollution from drug manufacturing: review and perspectives
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Abstract
As long ago as the sixteenth century, Paracelsus recognized that 'the dose makes the poison'. Indeed, environmental concentrations of pharmaceuticals excreted by humans are limited, most importantly because a defined dose is given to just a fraction of the population. By contrast, recent studies have identified direct emission from drug manufacturing as a source of much higher environmental discharges that, in some cases, greatly exceed toxic threshold concentrations. Because production is concentrated in specific locations, the risks are not linked to usage patterns. Furthermore, as the drugs are not consumed, metabolism in the human body does not reduce concentrations. The environmental risks associated with…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Production (economics)
- Environmental pollution
- Business
- Natural resource economics
- Pollution
- Population
- Drug
- Risk analysis (engineering)
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