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    Americans are drinking toxic water

    The drinking water of some six million people across the country may have elevated levels of unregulated toxic chemicals widely used in the past in many household products — notably pans coated with Teflon — a Harvard-led study published Tuesday found.

    Resistant to heat, water, and oil, perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a class of chemicals that have been used for decades to coat fabric or food packaging, and to manufacture fire-fighting foams and Teflon pans. Now mostly phased out in the U.S., PFAS went unregulated and were often disposed in watersheds. These chemicals are persistent in the environment and have been linked to adverse health effects in animals, according to the EPA. In humans, PFAS have been linked to a wide range of illnesses, including birth defects, cancer, and immune system dysfunction, according to multiple studies.

    “These compounds have been used for over 60 years and it is only in the most recent years that we’ve began to understand how serious this pollution is, and how toxic [PFAS] are,” Philippe Grandjean, co-author and adjunct professor of environmental health at Harvard University, told ThinkProgress.

    According to the study published in Environmental Science & Technology Letters, 75 percent of public water systems that exceeded PFAS federally recommended safety levels (updated this year) were found in 13 states: Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Minnesota, Massachusetts, New Jersey, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. While PFAS are largely on their way out, the substitutes are at times chemically related and could still be toxic, recent studies have found.

    National sampling of PFASs and some related chemicals like PFOAs began in 2013, under an EPA program that requires all public water systems serving at least 10,000 people to test for unregulated contaminants. While the EPA uses this assessment to figure out if contamination warrants regulation, the Harvard study used EPA data compiled from 2013 through 2015 to map the link between potential sources of pollution and drinking water contamination. (source)

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    Quote Jerry View Post
    I don't know anymore and I agree with your response lol I have been told by my natural path doctor that I should drink distilled water or spring water because she ran a lot of test on me and told me what I need to take to stay healthy *shrugs* I had dasani water earlier and I'm still alive and feeling ok.

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