Pharmaceutical pollution from health care: a systems-based strategy for mitigating risks to public and environmental health

Kelly Thornber, Matthew Bentham, Sharon Pfleger, Claas Kirchhelle, Fiona Adshead, Stewart Owen, Hayden Holmes, A Ross Brown, Caroline Farmer, Min Na Eii, Lydia Niemi, Lara Wöhler, Edward C F Wilson, Matthew J Wade, Wendy Tyler-Batt, Matthew Taylor, Georgina Sowman, Paul Southall, Richard Smith, Carol RoutledgeJohn Redshaw, Emma Pitchforth, Melissa Pegg, Keith Moore, George Kirkham, Barbara Kasprzyk-Hordern, Karin Helwig, Stuart Gibb, Lora E Fleming, Sean Comber, Rob Collins, Heather Brown, Sinead Brophy, Richard E Brazier, Hannah Blitzer, Julie Barnett, Rosalie Arendt, Julius Cesar Alejandre, Charles R Tyler

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Human pharmaceuticals are increasingly detected in environments around the world, with growing international calls to mitigate the ecological and human health risks posed by these novel entities. Exposure to pharmaceutical pollutants can negatively affect the behaviour, reproduction, and health of wildlife, contributing towards declining ecological health and global biodiversity loss. Pharmaceuticals in the environment are also driving rising levels of antimicrobial resistance, a major public health threat. Developing strategies to mitigate these public and environmental health risks has been greatly limited by diverse and often conflicting stakeholder interests and the need to retain the major human health and socioeconomic benefits that pharmaceuticals provide. In this Personal View, we propose a multistakeholder, systems-based approach for high-income countries to develop transformational national mitigation strategies. Applying this approach to a UK case study highlighted the growing risks caused by the unsustainability of the current UK health-care pharmaceutical system and enabled us to identify 37 synergistic intervention points that target both the tangible easy wins and the deep-rooted social drivers of the issue. We believe our approach will support high-income countries in minimising the public and environmental health risks associated with pharmaceutical pollution, by driving long-term sustainability across the pharmaceutical lifecycle, for a positive pharmaceutical future.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101404
Number of pages14
JournalLancet Planetary Health
Volume10
Issue number1
Early online date19 Jan 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Jan 2026

Acknowledgements

The views expressed in this manuscript are a general consensus from a diverse group of stakeholders and might not represent those of individual coauthors. We thank all members of our consortium who provided valuable evidence and perspectives in the working group activities but did not contribute to the interpretations of these data. We thank A-Side Design Limited and Will Stahl-Timmins for their support in creating the infographics.

Funding

This project was made possible by cofunding from the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences Business Engagement and Innovation Fund, University of Exeter, and the University of Exeter’s Medical Research Council Impact Accelerator Account (grant reference MR/X502820/1). These funding sources had no role in the study design; collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; writing of the report; or the decision to submit the paper for publication.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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