All Stories

  1. Pharmaceuticals and the Environment (PiE): Evolution and impact of the published literature revealed by bibliometric analysis
  2. In response : Government perspective
  3. Reducing Environmental Contamination by Drugs by Lessening the Contributions from Excretion
  4. The possible role of cognitive bias in selecting which environmental contaminants to study
  5. Prescribing lower doses of drugs can reduce their impact on the environment
  6. Using biomarkers in sewage to monitor community-wide human health - BioSCIM
  7. Estimation of Small-area Human Population Size by Sewage Chemical-Information Mining (SCIM)
  8. Green pharmacy and pharmEcovigilance: prescribing and the planet
  9. Aquatic uptake of drug residues from the environment
  10. Illicit Drugs and the Environment
  11. Synoptic review of illicit drugs in sewage and their measurement to gauge human usage rates
  12. Previously unrecognized pathways to the environment and routes to human exposure for pharmaceuticals
  13. The Afterlife of Drugs and the Role of PharmEcovigilance
  14. Beyond the medicine cabinet: An analysis of where and why medications accumulate
  15. The Afterlife of Drugs and the Role of PharmEcovigilance
  16. Types and quantities of leftover drugs entering the environment via disposal to sewage — Revealed by coroner records
  17. Non-regulated water contaminants: emerging research
  18. Cradle-to-Cradle Stewardship of Drugs for Minimizing Their Environmental Disposition While Promoting Human Health. I. Rationale for and Avenues toward a Green Pharmacy
  19. Cradle-to-Cradle Stewardship of Drugs for Minimizing Their Environmental Disposition While Promoting Human Health. II. Drug Disposal, Waste Reduction, and Future Directions
  20. The roles of the medical community and "pseudopersistence" in drug contamination of the environment
  21. "Sewage forensics" or "sewer epidemiology" - monitoring drug levels in sewage to gauge usage
  22. Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products (PPCPs) in the Environment
  23. Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products in the Environment: Agents of Subtle Change?