Pharmaceuticals in the environment (PiE) are released mainly through anthropogenic activities such as patient use and concentrated sources from manufacturing, animal feedlots, and healthcare facilities. This paper assesses how antibiotic discharges affect surface waters and promote AMR. The paper reviews mechanisms of antibiotic resistance, analyzes existing policies, and explores hypothetical scenarios involving releases from diverse sources and a range of mitigation strategies and technologies.
George Hollerbach
Mitigation of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) in Water Resources: Risk, Mitigation, Guidance and Policy Updates
Authors: George Hollerbach, P.E. BCEE, Randall Watts, Ph.D., Jennifer DiPilato, P.E., Djordje Vilimanovic, Ph.D.
Water Environment Federation
Recent Papers and Reports
- To the RESCU: Lessons from Using Progressive Design-Build to Deliver Agency’s Largest Program
- Mitigation of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) in Water Resources: Risk, Mitigation, Guidance and Policy Updates
- LLMs in Action: Practical Applications for Water Utilities
- Simplified Modeling of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances Breakthrough Using Granular Activated Carbon for Groundwater Treatment
- Is Low-DO the Way to Go?
- Review of full-scale advanced anaerobic digestion in North America
- Selective dysprosium/terbium recovery from mine waste using ion-specific alkali/urea chitosan hydrogels
- Enhancing Drinking Water Treatment Resilience to Wildfire Events
- AI Adoption Guide for Water and Wastewater Utilities
- Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in untreated and treated sludge/biosolids from 27 water resource recovery facilities across the United States and Canada