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Drinking Water Toxin Halves Disease Risk After Exposure Reduction
18 Nov
Summary
- Arsenic in drinking water linked to cancer, heart disease, and more
- Reducing arsenic by 70% can slash disease risk by over 50%
- Study tracked 11,000 adults in Bangladesh over 20 years

According to a recent study, millions of Americans are being exposed to a cancer-linked toxin in their household water, but reducing the contamination can significantly improve their health. The study, conducted over 20 years with nearly 11,000 adults in Bangladesh, found that lowering arsenic levels in drinking water by around 70% can slash people's risk of dying from chronic diseases, heart disease, and cancer by more than 50%.
Arsenic is a naturally occurring heavy metal that contaminates groundwater across the United States, often seeping into private wells undetected. Chronic exposure to arsenic has been linked to a range of deadly conditions, including various cancers, cardiovascular disease, and developmental issues in children. Unlike some toxins, arsenic accumulates in the body over time, compounding the health risks the longer a person is exposed.
The study's authors liken the health benefits of reducing arsenic exposure to quitting smoking - the risk doesn't disappear overnight, but it begins to decline steadily. They estimate that if everyone with high arsenic levels had lowered their exposure, it could have prevented around 5 chronic disease deaths per 1,000 people annually.
The research provides compelling evidence that mitigating this hidden threat in household water can have a dramatic impact on public health, even for those who have dealt with long-term contamination. As more Americans become aware of the dangers of arsenic in their water, this study offers hope that taking action to reduce exposure can significantly improve outcomes and save lives.


