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Researchers have figured out how to give an entire community a drug 
test using just a teaspoon of wastewater from a city's sewer plant.

The test wouldn't be used to finger any single person as a drug user. 
But it would help federal law enforcement and other agencies track the 
spread of dangerous drugs, like methamphetamine, across the country.

Oregon State University scientists tested 10 unnamed American cities 
for remnants of drugs, both legal and illegal, from wastewater 
streams. They were able to show that they could get a good snapshot of 
what people are taking.




"It's a community urinalysis," said Caleb Banta-Green, a University of 
Washington drug abuse researcher who was part of the Oregon State 
team. The scientists presented their results Tuesday at a meeting of 
the American Chemical Society in Boston.

Two federal agencies have taken samples from U.S. waterways to see if 
drug testing a whole city is doable, but they haven't gotten as far as 
the Oregon researchers.

One of the early results of the new study showed big differences in 
methamphetamine use city to city. One urban area with a gambling 
industry had meth levels more than five times higher than other 
cities. Yet methamphetamine levels were virtually nonexistent in some 
smaller Midwestern locales, said Jennifer Field, the lead researcher 
and a professor of environmental toxicology at Oregon State.

The ingredient Americans consume and excrete the most was caffeine, 
Field said.

Cities in the experiment ranged from 17,000 to 600,000 in population, 
but Field declined to identify them, saying that could harm her 
relationship with the sewage plant operators.

She plans to start a survey for drugs in the wastewater of at least 40 
Oregon communities.

The science behind the testing is simple. Nearly every drug - legal 
and illicit - that people take leaves the body. That waste goes into 
toilets and then into wastewater treatment plants.

"Wastewater facilities are wonderful places to understand what humans 
consume and excrete," Field said.

In the study presented Tuesday, one teaspoon of untreated sewage water 
from each of the cities was tested for 15 different drugs. Field said 
researchers can't calculate how many people in a town are using drugs.

She said that one fairly affluent community scored low for illicit 
drugs except for cocaine. Cocaine and ecstasy tended to peak on 
weekends and drop on weekdays, she said, while methamphetamine and 
prescription drugs were steady throughout the week.

Field said her study suggests that a key tool currently used by drug 
abuse researchers - self-reported drug questionnaires - underestimates 
drug use.

"We have so few indicators of current use," said Jane Maxwell of the 
Addiction Research Institute at the University of Texas, who wasn't 
part of the study. "This could be a very interesting new indicator."

David Murray, chief scientist for U.S. Office of National Drug Control 
Policy, said the idea interests his agency.

Murray said the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is testing 
federal wastewater samples just to see if that's a good method for 
monitoring drug use. But he didn't know how many tests were conducted 
or where.

The EPA will "flush out the details" on testing, Benjamin Grumbles 
joked. The EPA assistant administrator said the agency is already 
looking at the problem of potential harm to rivers and lakes from 
legal pharmaceuticals.

The idea of testing on a citywide basis for drugs makes sense, as long 
as it doesn't violate people's privacy, said Tom Angell of the 
Students for Sensible Drug Policy, a Washington-based group that 
advocates legalizing most drugs.

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