Illinois: Consumers
whose drinking water can be contaminated by the release of untreated
wastewater after heavy rains face increased risk for gastrointestinal
illness, according to a report in the journal Environmental Health
Perspectives. “Combined” sewer systems collect both sewage and stormwater runoff on
the way to treatment facilities. When heavy rainfall fills these
systems beyond their capacity, untreated wastewater can back up into
homes. To reduce the risk of home flooding during heavy precipitation,
municipalities often discharge some of the untreated flow into nearby
bodies of water. The release of untreated waste is known as a combined
sewer overflow.
Many older cities such as Chicago have combined sewer systems — along
with 772 other communities, primarily in the Northeast, Great Lakes and
Pacific Northwest, serving a total of 40 million people. While some
cities are building infrastructure to handle sewage and runoff
separately, other regions with combined systems depend on reservoirs to
provide extra capacity during extreme rainfalls. Chicago’s Deep Tunnel
was designed to hold 2.3 billion gallons of untreated wastewater during
storms to prevent combined sewer overflows and flooding of basements.
During one massive 2013 storm, the tunnel reached capacity and its
entire contents were rerouted and ultimately discharged into Lake
Michigan.
“Existing infrastructure is already stretched beyond its ability to
manage severe precipitation, and with climate change, extreme rainfall
events are becoming more frequent, and so are combined sewer overflows,”
says epidemiologist Jyotsna Jagai of the University of Illinois at
Chicago School of Public Health and lead author of the study.
“These overflows can have serious health impacts on communities if
untreated water carrying viruses and bacteria contaminate drinking
waters,” she said.
The researchers looked at the daily rate of ER visits for
gastrointestinal illnesses between 2003 and 2007 for eight days
following extreme rainfall events in three areas of Massachusetts – 11
neighboring towns with combined sewer systems that overflow into the
Merrimack River, a source of drinking water; 24 adjacent cities and
towns with combined sewer systems that overflow into Boston Harbor, a
recreational body of water; and nine neighboring towns without combined
sewer systems in the Plymouth region.
Extreme precipitation events — defined as those at or above the 99th percentile of daily rainfall — numbered 18 in the areas they studied between 2003 and 2007.
Emergency room visits related to gastrointestinal illness went up 13
percent in the eight days following extreme precipitation events in
areas with combined sewer systems that discharged untreated sewage and
storm water into drinking water sources, while no significant increase
in such visits was seen at hospitals in areas where combined discharge
overflowed into recreational waters or in areas without combined sewer
overflows.
But the true number who felt ill is probably much higher, says Jagai,
who is research assistant professor of environmental and occupational
health sciences at UIC.
“Not everyone with gastrointestinal symptoms goes to the emergency
room, so the increase we saw in ER visits in areas where there were
combined sewer overflows into drinking water sources is just a fraction
of the people whose health may have been impacted,” she said.
The study was funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency. Co-authors are Elizabeth Hilborn, Shiliang Wang and Timothy Wade
of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s National Health and
Environmental Effects Research Laboratory; Quanlin Li of the Samuel
Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in
Los Angeles; and Kyle Messier of the University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill’s Gillings School of Global Public Health.
- See more at: http://news.uic.edu/combined-sewer-systems-lead-to-risk-of-illness-after-heavy-rains#sthash.EtJP1tSX.dpuf
