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<br />Causes and Impacts of Salinity <br /> <br />Health <br /> <br />The Environmental Protection Agency, Drinking <br />Water Office, Health Impacts Laboratory <br />sponsored a conference in 1984 on "In organics <br />in Drinking Water and Cardiovascular Disease." <br />The conference was directed by Dr. Edward <br />Calabrese, one of the original United States <br />researchers in the realm of the health impacts of <br />sodium. It was the study by Drs. Calabrese and <br />Tuthill concerning schoolchildren in two <br />Massachusetts communities that sparked the <br />initiation of many studies around the world. <br /> <br />Damages vs Salinity <br /> <br />.. <br />CD <br />,., <br />CD <br />Co <br />.. <br />" <br />~ <br />e <br />.. <br />CD <br />a> <br />.. <br />E <br />.. <br />c <br /> <br />52,0 <br /> <br /> <br />51.5 <br /> <br />51.0 <br /> <br />50.5 <br /> <br />50 <br />400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 11 DO <br />Selini1y ellmperial Dam (mg/L) <br /> <br />Figure 5.-Annual damages increase with salinity. <br /> <br />In the study by Drs. Calabrese and Tuthill, a difference of 2 to 5 millimeters mercury of blood <br />pressure was found between third graders with a drinking water supply of about 10 mg/L sodium <br />and those drinking water of about 102 mg/L sodium. <br /> <br />Subsequent attempts by Drs. Calabrese and Tuthill to validate these results with other groups or by <br />other methods (bottled water) have proven inconclusive. Studies reported from the Netherlands <br />did support findings of slightly elevated blood pressure among schoolchildren consuming high <br />sodium water, but most other studies were either inconclusive or showed that there was no effect. <br /> <br />Two areas of concern mentioned during the discussions were the use of zeolite water softeners <br />on the kitchen cold water faucet and the cooking of vegetables in high sodium water, as the <br />vegetables can absorb large amounts of sodium during cooking. In most cases, avoidance of these <br />two actions would be more significant than any reduction in raw water concentration. <br /> <br />Other conference discussions on hard water versus soft water primarily concluded that soft water <br />was not harmful, but hard water contained some beneficial property, possibly calcium, which <br />reduced the ability of the body to absorb trace metals and, thus, lowered the overall exposure to <br />such elements as cadmium and lead. <br /> <br />Additionally, while water softeners help reduce pipe scaling and soap usage, several speakers <br />stressed that a bypass should be placed on the kitchen cold water tap, the tap most used for <br />drinking and cooking water, to maintain a certain level of hardness. <br /> <br />Other papers focused primarily on the health effects of cadmium, barium, and lead in drinking <br />water. Studies seem to indicate that barium has no effect on cardiovascular disease below a level <br />of about 10 mg/L, while cadmium and lead do have a definite adverse impact. None of these <br />elements are present in any significant concentrations in the mainstem reaches of the Colorado <br />River. <br /> <br />It appears from discussions at the conference that no adverse health impacts related to present <br />sodium or hardness levels occur from drinking water from the Lower Colorado River. Any health <br />effect of a reduction in sodium and hardness expected from the Colorado River Salinity Control <br />Program would be negligible. <br /> <br />15 <br />