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Pharmaceutical pollution from health care: a systems-based strategy for mitigating risks to public and environmental health
Pollution, environmental and human health
Published January 19, 2026
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
26-01-2026 to 26-01-2027
Available on-demand until 26th January 2027
Cost
Free
Education type
Publication
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Human pharmaceuticals are increasingly detected in environments around the world, with growing international calls to mitigate the ecological and human health risks posed by these novel entities. Exposure to pharmaceutical pollutants can negatively affect the behaviour, reproduction, and health of wildlife, contributing towards declining ecological health and global biodiversity loss. Pharmaceuticals in the environment are also driving rising levels of antimicrobial resistance, a major public health threat. Developing strategies to mitigate these public and environmental health risks has been greatly limited by diverse and often conflicting stakeholder interests and the need to retain the major human health and socioeconomic benefits that pharmaceuticals provide. In this Personal View, we propose a multistakeholder, systems-based approach for high-income countries to develop transformational national mitigation strategies. Applying this approach to a UK case study highlighted the growing risks caused by the unsustainability of the current UK health-care pharmaceutical system and enabled us to identify 37 synergistic intervention points that target both the tangible easy wins and the deep-rooted social drivers of the issue. We believe our approach will support high-income countries in minimising the public and environmental health risks associated with pharmaceutical pollution, by driving long-term sustainability across the pharmaceutical lifecycle, for a positive pharmaceutical future.
Contact details
Email address

Elsevier Ltd
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