PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Model predicts PFAS occurrence in groundwater in the US

Summary author: Walter Beckwith

2024-10-24
(Press-News.org) According to a new machine learning-assisted predictive model, as many as 95 million Americans may rely on groundwater containing PFAS for their drinking water supplies before any treatment, researchers report. This raises concerns about unmonitored contamination in domestic and public water supplies. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), often called “forever chemicals,“ are highly persistent environmental contaminants linked to adverse environmental and health effects. Used in many consumer products, these organic pollutants have become ubiquitous in the environment and are routinely found in groundwater and surface water. Although the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has introduced new monitoring requirements to address PFAS contamination in drinking water, these efforts do not cover small public water systems or private groundwater wells, which collectively supply drinking water to millions of Americans. To address these gaps, Andrea Tokranov and colleagues present a national predictive model using the machine learning approach XGBoost (IeXtreme Gradient Boosting), trained on PFAS contamination samples taken between 2019 and 2022 from three well networks within principal aquifers across the U.S. This allowed the authors to broadly estimate PFAS occurrence in groundwater based on environmental variables, well depth, and known sources of PFAS contamination. Model predictions they derived are for the source groundwater prior to any treatment.

 

Tokranov et al. found that 71 to 95 million people across the U.S. potentially rely on groundwater with detectable levels of PFAS before treatment, with small public water systems accounting for the majority. States like Florida, California, and Michigan had the highest populations affected, while Massachusetts and the District of Columbia reported the highest percentages of affected users. The authors note that although many public water suppliers now monitor and treat PFAS, treatment costs remain challenging, particularly for low-income communities, and domestic well users often lack testing or remediation, increasing their vulnerability. “The footprint of PFAS occurrence at the depth of public and domestic water supply may continue to expand as groundwater is recharged to aquifers and migrates downward over time, given the extensive PFAS contamination reported in air, rain, and soil, among many other sources,” write Tokranov et al. “Awareness and regular monitoring of PFAS coupled with appropriate drinking water treatment will help reduce human exposure from drinking water sources.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

By studying new species of tardigrade, researchers glean insights into radiation tolerance

2024-10-24
Tardigrades, eight-legged microorganisms colloquially known as “water bears,” are the most radiation-tolerant animals on Earth. Now, by studying a newly identified species of tardigrade, researchers have gleaned valuable insights into the animal’s ability to withstand radiation. These findings hold implications for safeguarding human health in extreme environments, such as spaceflight. Roughly 1,500 species of tardigrades have been described. These creatures can endure gamma radiation ...

Plastic chemical causes causes DNA breakage and chromosome defects in sex cells

Plastic chemical causes causes DNA breakage and chromosome defects in sex cells
2024-10-24
A new study conducted in roundworms finds that a common plastic ingredient causes breaks in DNA strands, resulting in egg cells with the wrong number of chromosomes. Monica Colaiácovo of Harvard Medical School led the study, which was published October 24 in the journal PLOS Genetics. Benzyl butyl phthalate (BBP) is a chemical that makes plastic more flexible and durable, and is found in many consumer products, including food packaging, personal care products and children’s toys. Previous studies have shown that BBP interferes with ...

Vitamin K supplement slows prostate cancer in mice

Vitamin K supplement slows prostate cancer in mice
2024-10-24
Prostate cancer is a quiet killer. In most men, it’s treatable. However, in some cases, it resists all known therapies and turns extremely deadly. A new discovery at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) points to a potentially groundbreaking solution. CSHL Professor Lloyd Trotman’s lab has found that the pro-oxidant supplement menadione slows prostate cancer progression in mice. The supplement is a precursor to vitamin K, commonly found in leafy greens. The story begins more than two decades ago. In 2001, the National Cancer Institute’s SELECT trial sought to determine if an antioxidant ...

Wildfires are becoming faster and more dangerous in the Western U.S.

2024-10-24
Fast-growing fires were responsible for nearly 90 percent of fire-related damages despite being relatively rare in the United States between 2001-2020, according to a new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder. “Fast fires,” which thrust embers into the air ahead of rapidly advancing flames, can ignite homes before emergency responders are able to intervene. The work, published today in Science, shows these fires are getting faster in the Western U.S., increasing the risk for millions of people.  The research highlights a critical gap in hazard preparedness across the U.S. — National-level ...

Gut bacteria transfer genes to disable weapons of their competitors

2024-10-24
Bacteria evolve rapidly in the human gut by sharing genetic elements with each other. Bacteriodales is a prolific order of gut bacteria that trade hundreds of genetic elements. Little is known, however, about the effects of these DNA transfers, either to the fitness of the bacteria or the host. New research from the University of Chicago shows that a large, ubiquitous mobile genetic element changes the antagonistic weaponry of Bacteroides fragilis, a common bacterium of the human gut. Acquisition of this element shuts down a potent weapon ...

A new hydrogel semiconductor represents a breakthrough for tissue-interfaced bioelectronics

A new hydrogel semiconductor represents a breakthrough for tissue-interfaced bioelectronics
2024-10-24
The ideal material for interfacing electronics with living tissue is soft, stretchable, and just as water-loving as the tissue itself—in short, a hydrogel. Semiconductors, the key materials for bioelectronics such as pacemakers, biosensors, and drug delivery devices, on the other hand, are rigid, brittle, and water-hating, impossible to dissolve in the way hydrogels have traditionally been built. A paper published today in Science from the UChicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME) has solved this challenge that has long ...

Bird study finds sons help their parents less than daughters because they’re scouting future prospects

Bird study finds sons help their parents less than daughters because they’re scouting future prospects
2024-10-24
Male birds help their parents less than females because they’re too busy scouting for new places to live and breed, a remarkable new study shows. The study, led by researchers at the Centre for Ecology and Conservation at the University of Exeter, examined the cooperative behaviour and movement patterns of social birds called white-browed sparrow weavers, which live in the Kalahari desert. These birds live in family groups in which only a dominant pair breeds – and their grown-up offspring, particularly females, help ...

Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) awarded up to $48 million to utilize body-on-a-chip technologies to study fibrosis-inducing chemical injuries

Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) awarded up to $48 million to utilize body-on-a-chip technologies to study fibrosis-inducing chemical injuries
2024-10-24
The Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) has been awarded an eight-year contract, valued up to $48 million from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to support the utilization of cutting-edge body-on-a-chip technologies aimed at studying and developing potential treatments for sulfur mustard and other fibrosis-inducing chemicals. The program has been approved with an initial contracting commitment of approximately $18 million. This contract represents a continued partnership between WFIRM and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), ...

Study offers ‘compelling evidence’ for continuous stroke care improvement

2024-10-24
Research Highlights: A retrospective look at Get With The Guidelines® – Stroke registry data from 2003 to 2022 finds substantial and sustained improvements in acute stroke care among those in the quality improvement program. Researchers found increased adherence to evidence-based stroke care translates to better clinical outcomes and, ultimately, more patients being discharged home or to a skilled nursing facility more quickly. Overall, authors say the positive trends suggest concerted quality improvement initiatives can improve ...

Professor awarded NEH grant to advance anthropology research collections at Texas A&M

Professor awarded NEH grant to advance anthropology research collections at Texas A&M
2024-10-24
Dr. Katie Custer Bojakowski, an instructional assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Texas A&M University and the director and curator of its Anthropology Research Collections (ARC), has been awarded a Preservation Assistance Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). The NEH’s Preservation Assistance Grants program helps organizations protect their collections of historical and cultural items, making sure they remain available for students, scholars and the public. These grants help address risks to these collections, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UTEP researchers develop low-cost device that detects cancer in an hour

Texas A&M physicist Kevin Kelly earns American Physical Society Early Career Award

University of Maryland researcher awarded $1.8 million to study climate change’s impact on people with kidney disease

Johns Hopkins Children’s Center research in mice suggests zinc supplements have potential value to directly treat short bowel syndrome

Kalinin receives David Adler Lectureship Award

Evaluating the link between chemicals and declining insect populations

Scientists discover molecules that store much of the carbon in space

Sublethal agrochemical exposure disrupts insect behavior and long-term survivability

Understanding that US wildfires are becoming faster-moving is key to preparedness

Model predicts PFAS occurrence in groundwater in the US

By studying new species of tardigrade, researchers glean insights into radiation tolerance

Plastic chemical causes causes DNA breakage and chromosome defects in sex cells

Vitamin K supplement slows prostate cancer in mice

Wildfires are becoming faster and more dangerous in the Western U.S.

Gut bacteria transfer genes to disable weapons of their competitors

A new hydrogel semiconductor represents a breakthrough for tissue-interfaced bioelectronics

Bird study finds sons help their parents less than daughters because they’re scouting future prospects

Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) awarded up to $48 million to utilize body-on-a-chip technologies to study fibrosis-inducing chemical injuries

Study offers ‘compelling evidence’ for continuous stroke care improvement

Professor awarded NEH grant to advance anthropology research collections at Texas A&M

New tool helps scientists spot patterns in mountains of data

Glomerular filtration rate changes following UTI in children with vesicoureteral reflux

Dandelion-shaped supernova and zombie star

Experts call for clear and concise regulation of exosome-based treatments

Zebrahub: New atlas tracks zebrafish development like never before

Unnoticeable electric currents could reduce skin infections

Expanded newborn screening using genome sequencing for early actionable conditions

In pioneering study, gene technology outperforms standard newborn screening tests

Racial disparities in receipt of guideline-concordant care in older adults with early breast cancer

Fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamine, and cocaine analyte concentrations in urine drug testing specimens

[Press-News.org] Model predicts PFAS occurrence in groundwater in the US
Summary author: Walter Beckwith