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The Current Status and Prevention of Antibiotic Pollution in Groundwater in China

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2022 60 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Huiping Zeng, Huiping Zeng, Jianxue Li, Jianxue Li, Huiping Zeng, Xu He, Weihua Zhao, Jiaxin Xu, Xu He, Xu He, Dong Li, Huiping Zeng, Jie Zhang

Summary

This review systematically described antibiotic sources, migration, transformation, contamination levels, and ecological risks in Chinese groundwater, finding that antibiotic pollution is widespread and poses growing risks to drinking water quality and aquatic ecosystems. The authors identified gaps in monitoring and called for stronger regulatory controls on antibiotic discharge to groundwater.

The problem of environmental pollution caused by the abuse of antibiotics has received increasing attention. However, only in recent years have antibiotic pollution and its risk assessment to the environment been deeply studied. Although there has been a large number of reports about the input, occurrence, destination, and influence of antibiotics in the past 10 years, systemic knowledge of antibiotics in the groundwater environment is still lacking. This review systematically expounds the sources, migration and transformation, pollution status, and potential risks to the ecological environment of antibiotics in groundwater systems, by integrating 10 years of existing research results. The results showed that 47 kinds of antibiotics in four categories, mainly sulfonamides and fluoroquinolones, have been detected; antibiotics in groundwater species will induce the production of resistance genes and cause ecological harm. In view of the entire process of antibiotics entering groundwater, the current antibiotic control methods at various levels are listed, including the control of the discharge of antibiotics at source, the removal of antibiotics in water treatment plants, and the treatment of existing antibiotic contamination in groundwater. Additionally, the future research direction of antibiotics in groundwater is pointed out, and suggestions and prospects for antibiotic control are put forward.

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