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Nationwide Mass Inventory and Degradation Assessment of Plastic Contact Lenses in US Wastewater

Environmental Science & Technology 2020 27 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Charles Rolsky, Varun Kelkar, Rolf U. Halden

Summary

Researchers conducted a nationwide mass inventory of disposable contact lenses in US wastewater, finding that 21% of lens users flush used lenses down the drain, contributing an estimated 44,000 kg per year of lens dry mass to US wastewater systems. Biological treatment partially degraded the lenses but failed to fully prevent lens fragments from entering aquatic environments, identifying contact lenses as a previously underappreciated microplastic pollution source.

Study Type Environmental

Plastics pose ecological and human health risks, with disposable contact lenses constituting a potential high-volume pollution source. Using sales data and an online survey of lens users (n = 416) alongside laboratory and field experiments at a conventional sewage treatment plant, we determined the environmental fate and mass inventories of contact lenses in the United States. The survey results revealed that 21 ± 0.8% of lens users flush their used lenses down the drain, a loading equivalent to 44 000 ± 1700 kg y-1 of lens dry mass discharged into US wastewater. Biological treatment of wastewater did not result in a measurable loss of plastic mass (p = 0.001) and caused only very limited changes in the polymer structure, as determined by μ-Raman spectroscopy. During sewage treatment, the lenses were found to accumulate as fragments in sewage sludge, resulting in an estimated accumulation of 24 000 ± 940 kg y-1 of microplastics destined for application on US agricultural soils contained in sewage sludge. Recycling of the contact lenses and their packaging amounted to only 0.04% of the total waste volume associated with contact lens use. This is the first study to identify contact lenses and more specifically silicone hydrogels, as a previously overlooked source of plastic and microplastic pollution.

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