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Study finds elevated levels of forever chemicals in rivers near Western Pa. wastewater plants

Photo credit: Sean Stipp / TribLIVE - A study of river water McKeesport's wastewater treatment plant found "forever chemicals" or PFAS measured at 26.3 parts per trillion in the mixing zone of the plant compared with 3.4 parts per trillion upstream.

Read the full article by Julia Maruca (TribLIVE)

“Wastewater treatment plants in Western Pennsylvania are dumping what’s known as forever chemicals into Pittsburgh’s rivers, a new study shows.

The report from the nonprofit Women for a Healthy Environment focuses on per- and polyfluorinated substances (PFAS), man-made chemicals used in many industrial and consumer products. It found a higher concentration of the chemicals where wastewater is discharged from a plant into a river, compared with lower levels just upstream of the discharge sites.

“It’s confirmation of another source of exposure and contamination,” said Michelle Naccarati-Chapkis, executive director of Women for a Healthy Environment.

PFAS chemicals have been linked to adverse health effects including compromised immune systems, cancers, poor reproductive health and child developmental issues, thyroid disease, liver damage and digestive conditions.” …

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