‘Forever chemicals' found in blood of 97 per cent of Victorians
The synthetic chemicals – perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances – are found in everyday products ranging from the linings of take-away coffee cups and pizza boxes to carpets and non-stick cookware. Once consumed, they take many years to exit the body.
On Tuesday, the Australian Bureau of Statistics released national and state-level data about the prevalence of 11 types of PFAS in the Australian population and found it is almost universally detectable in people.
The data was also broken down by sex and age, with PFAS concentrations in blood slightly higher in men than in women and gradually increasing from childhood to old age, peaking at age 75 and over. Data was gathered between 2022 and 2024.
The findings were 'in line with expectations' as use of PFAS within products peaked between the 1980s and the early 2000s but has since fallen through efforts to reduce its usage.
'As a result, older people have been exposed to more PFAS in the past, before the decrease in use of these chemicals. This historical exposure, combined with the long elimination half-lives of many PFAS, means that levels of PFAS are likely to be higher in older people,' the ABS said.
In Victoria, PFAS was detected in 97.3 per cent of people, just above the national level of 97.1 per cent. Tasmanians had the highest levels (98.9 per cent) and Northern Territorians the lowest (91.2 per cent).
Stuart Khan, a professor in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of New South Wales, said the results were 'shocking but not surprising' and broadly in line with results from studies in other countries such as the United States.
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The Advertiser
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The increased detections in samples from Sydney drinking water coincides with increased monitoring and concerns over the level of the contaminants considered safe, with some exceeding international guidelines. "Sydney's water meets current Australian standards, but when considering health benchmarks used in other countries, some samples were near or above safety limits," University of NSW chemistry professor William Donald said. He was the lead author of a study in environmental chemistry journal Chemosphere which reported the analysis of 32 tap water and 10 bottled water samples from Sydney catchment areas in early 2024. PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are a group of 15,000 highly toxic, synthetic chemicals used for their resistance to heat, stains and grease. They are sometimes called "forever chemicals" because they break down extremely slowly, including in humans. The researchers detected 31 chemicals, including 21 not previously recorded, as scientists grapple with removing the chemicals from the environment. The task is made more difficult by tiny tweaks in chemical structures creating new compounds, requiring their own assessments for toxicity, environmental persistence and potential health impacts. "We are stuck in a whack-a-mole situation with PFAS," Prof Donald said. Regulating the compounds as a class of chemicals rather than individually could ease the burden. A mobile filtration system was installed following the detection of PFAS chemicals at elevated levels in untreated water flowing into the Cascade water filtration plant in the NSW Blue Mountains in September. Researchers are also working on materials designed to absorb and break down the chemicals in water. The National Health and Medical Research Council updated its guidelines in June, but resisted implementing a draft guideline on perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS), allowing double the concentration first floated. If the 4ng/L guideline used by the United States Environmental Protection Agency had been adopted, the levels detected from samples at North Richmond in Sydney's northwest would have exceeded them. PFOS - a known carcinogen used in firefighting foam - was detected at 6ng/L in some of those samples, 2ng/L below the Australian guidelines. Lisa Hua, who along with Prof Donald, detected PFAS in the "tar balls" which closed Sydney beaches in October, said the low concentrations provided some reassurance. But new technologies to remove the chemicals from the environment and prevent their release should be explored, and wider testing could provide more insight into the level of contamination across Australia. 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ABC News
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