Citation
Wee, Sze Yee
(2019)
Occurrence, risk assessment and public risk perception of multiclass endocrine disrupting compounds in drinking water supply system.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
Presence of endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) in drinking water concerns the
security and sustainability of the supply system. The problem is not only limited to the pollution
level of EDCs in raw and treated water, but also exposure of organisms to EDCs especially human via
daily drinking water consumption. The trace level in tap water challenges the identification of
the multiclass EDCs. With the wide ranging nature and characteristics of the pollutants
themselves (if known at all), the analytical methods were made available only to single EDC group
and/or its metabolites. The limited EDC monitoring in tap water and evidence of human exposure risk
caused the increase of associated risks as they may have been underestimated and even unknown. The
present study describes an analytical method based on solid phase extraction followed by
liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (SPE-LC-MS/MS) for analysis of multiclass EDCs
(hormones, pharmaceuticals, plasticizers and pesticides) in tap water in a single extraction
step. The method was validated with recovery between 85 to 119% for most of the EDCs and
method detection limit ranging from
0.01 to 2.56 ng/L. Method precision was achieved with linearity > 0.9 and relative standard
deviation less than 15% for the targeted compounds. A total of 14 EDCs i.e., five hormones, seven
pharmaceuticals, one plasticizer and one pesticide was detected in Langat River, a drinking water
source treated for Malaysian drinking water supply. Chloramphenicol and 4-nonylphenol were below
method detection limit in both raw and treated water. Prevalent occurrence of EDCs was observed in
Malaysian tap water up to 66.40 ng/L (bisphenol A). Triclosan and 4-octylphenol were only detected
in tap water at concentration up to 9.74 and 0.44 ng/L, respectively. Variation also observed in
different housing types. For local exposure, human health risk assessment was based on human morphological, drinking water consumption patterns and household
practices collected through a survey using a newly developed and verified
questionnaire. This study captured the complex dynamic of the public-perceived risks
on safe drinking water quality in regards to EDCs and the influencing factors,
providing a comprehensive conceptualization of the predictors of environmental risk
perception, trust, attitude and knowledge. The public tend to perceive the risks through
nonrational processing system that highly subjected to cognitive and affective
influences. Also, the perceived EDCs contamination in tap water was found to have
no association with measured values. Monitoring and risk assessment are the initial
processes in multibarrier approach in drinking water supply system for safe water
resources. Fulfilling the gap of risk perception and identification of the role of risk
perception through development of risk perception model were useful in formulating
the efficient preventive and intervention measures with known target groups and
materials. Higher trust towards stakeholders and perceived risk on human exposure to
environmental risk, as well as positive attitude towards drinking water quality
improvements can increase the public perceived risk on drinking water. The
subsequent public improvement in terms of risk behavior development was also
essential for effective risk governance and communication, supporting the
aforementioned multibarrier approach.
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Additional Metadata
Item Type: |
Thesis
(Doctoral)
|
Subject: |
Drinking water - Contamination |
Subject: |
Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water |
Call Number: |
FPAS 2020 12 |
Chairman Supervisor: |
Ahmad Zaharin Aris, PhD |
Divisions: |
Faculty of Environmental Studies |
Keywords: |
Endocrine disrupting compound (EDC); SPE-LC-MS/MS; Tap water;
Risk assessment; Risk perception; Drinking water safety |
Depositing User: |
Ms. Nur Faseha Mohd Kadim
|
Date Deposited: |
07 Apr 2021 02:07 |
Last Modified: |
30 Dec 2021 04:37 |
URI: |
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/85199 |
Statistic Details: |
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