Biological Warfare Agents as Threats to Potable Water

Nearly all known biological warfare agents are intended for aerosol application. Although less effective as potable water threats, many are potentially capable of inflicting heavy casualties when ingested. Significant loss of mission capability can be anticipated even when complete recovery is possi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental health perspectives 1999-12, Vol.107 (12), p.975-984
Hauptverfasser: Burrows, W D, Renner, S E
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container_title Environmental health perspectives
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creator Burrows, W D
Renner, S E
description Nearly all known biological warfare agents are intended for aerosol application. Although less effective as potable water threats, many are potentially capable of inflicting heavy casualties when ingested. Significant loss of mission capability can be anticipated even when complete recovery is possible. Properly maintained field army water purification equipment can counter this threat, but personnel responsible for the operation and maintenance of the equipment may be most at risk of exposure. Municipal water treatment facilities would be measurably less effective. Some replicating (infectious) agents and a few biotoxins are inactivated by chlorine disinfection; for others chlorine is ineffective or of unknown efficacy. This report assesses the state of our knowledge of agents as potable water threats and contemplates the consequences of intentional or collateral contamination of potable water supplies by 18 replicating agents and 9 biotoxins known or likely to be weaponized or otherwise used as threats.
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source MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; PubMed Central Open Access; Jstor Complete Legacy; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Aerosols
Biological Warfare
Biological warfare agents
Chlorine
Disinfection
Dosage
Ingestion
Potable water
Reviews
Toxins
Tuberculosis
Water consumption
Water Purification
Water Supply
title Biological Warfare Agents as Threats to Potable Water
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