Department of Sociology, Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA, USA.
Silent Spring Institute, Newton, MA, USA.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2019 Mar;29(2):157-171. doi: 10.1038/s41370-018-0099-9. Epub 2019 Jan 8.
Communities across the U.S. are discovering drinking water contaminated by perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and determining appropriate actions. There are currently no federal PFAS drinking water standards despite widespread drinking water contamination, ubiquitous population-level exposure, and toxicological and epidemiological evidence of adverse health effects. Absent federal PFAS standards, multiple U.S. states have developed their own health-based water guideline levels to guide decisions about contaminated site cleanup and drinking water surveillance and treatment. We examined perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) water guideline levels developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and state agencies to protect people drinking the water, and summarized how and why these levels differ. We referenced documents and tables released in June 2018 by the Interstate Technology and Regulatory Council (ITRC) to identify states that have drinking water and groundwater guideline levels for PFOA and/or PFOS that differ from EPA's health advisories (HAs). We also gathered assessment documents from state websites and contacted state environmental and health agencies to identify and confirm current guidelines. Seven states have developed their own water guideline levels for PFOA and/or PFOS ranging from 13 to 1000 ng/L, compared to EPA's HA of 70 ng/L for both compounds individually or combined. We find that the development of PFAS guideline levels via exposure and hazard assessment decisions is influenced by multiple scientific, technical, and social factors, including managing scientific uncertainty, technical decisions and capacity, and social, political, and economic influences from involved stakeholders. Assessments by multiple states and academic scientists suggest that EPA's HA is not sufficiently protective. The ability of states to develop their own guideline levels and standards provides diverse risk assessment approaches as models for other state and federal regulators, while a sufficiently protective, scientifically sound, and enforceable federal standard would provide more consistent protection.
美国各地的社区都发现饮用水受到全氟烷基和多氟烷基物质 (PFAS) 的污染,并正在确定相应的行动措施。尽管饮用水受到广泛污染、普遍存在人群接触、以及存在毒理学和流行病学证据表明对健康有不良影响,但目前美国仍没有针对 PFAS 的联邦饮用水标准。在美国,鉴于缺乏联邦 PFAS 标准,多个州已经制定了基于健康的水指导值,以指导对污染场地清理、饮用水监测和处理做出决策。我们研究了美国环境保护署 (EPA) 和州机构制定的全氟辛酸 (PFOA) 和全氟辛烷磺酸 (PFOS) 水指导值,以保护饮用水人群,并总结了这些水平的差异以及产生这些差异的原因。我们参考了州际技术和监管委员会 (ITRC) 于 2018 年 6 月发布的文件和表格,以确定制定了与 EPA 健康建议 (HA) 不同的饮用水和地下水 PFOA 和/或 PFOS 指导值的州。我们还从州网站收集了评估文件,并联系了州环境和卫生机构,以确定和确认当前的指导值。与 EPA 对两种化合物单独或联合设定的 70ng/L 的 HA 相比,有七个州已经制定了自己的 PFOA 和/或 PFOS 水指导值,范围从 13 到 1000ng/L。我们发现,通过暴露和危害评估决策制定 PFAS 指导值受到多种科学、技术和社会因素的影响,包括管理科学不确定性、技术决策和能力,以及涉及利益相关者的社会、政治和经济影响。多个州和学术科学家的评估表明,EPA 的 HA 没有提供充分的保护。各州制定自己的指导值和标准的能力为其他州和联邦监管机构提供了多样化的风险评估方法,而一个充分保护、合理科学和可执行的联邦标准将提供更一致的保护。