
University of California and
Chilean researchers study results report children exposed to high levels of arsenic in their drinking water are seven
to 12 times more likely to die of lung cancer and other lung diseases in young adulthood. The risk of dying due to
bronchiectasis, usually a rare lung disease, is 46 times higher than normal if the child's mother also drank the
arsenic-contaminated water while pregnant.
"I sometimes ponder the improbability that drinking water
with concentrations of arsenic less than one-thousandth of a gram per liter could do this, and think that I've got to
be wrong. But our years of working with arsenic exposure in India and Chile tie in with this study perfectly,"
states Allan Smith, professor of epidemiology at UC Berkeley's School of Public Health.
According to the
study, arsenic is particularly prevalent in a province in the north of Chile, one of the driest places on earth. In
1958, the cities of Antofagasta and neighboring Mejillones tapped into arsenic-laden rivers to supply their growing
populations with water. For the next 13 years, the water supply for all residents in the cities was laced with an
average of 860 micrograms per liter of arsenic. In contrast, the standard for arsenic in drinking water in the United
States was 50 micrograms per liter, now 10 micrograms per liter. The Chilean cities became a tragic natural experiment
for studying the effects of arsenic on humans.
Further information from the study states that,
"Putting these results in perspective, studies have found that the rates of early-adult lung cancer among
survivors of the atomic bombings at Hiroshima and Nagasaki exposed to high levels of radiation before birth or as
children are many times lower than those in Antofagasta and Mejillones. Only active smoking itself results in lung
cancer rates higher than the seven-fold increase found in his study." It's chilling to consider how global this
problem might be. Less than fifteen years ago, elevated concentrations of arsenic were reported in the drinking water
in the desert where I lived, right here in the United States. The research will appear in the July issue of
Environmental Health Perspectives, and will be made available online. Environmental Health Perspectives has made the
27-page abstract available now, as a PDF document.