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Estimation of alcohol and nicotine consumption in 11 cities of Turkey using wastewater‐based epidemiology

Evşen Yavuz Güzel, Aslı Atasoy, İsmail Ethem Gören, Nebile Dağlıoğlu

2020Drug Testing and Analysis17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Alcohol and tobacco are the most frequently consumed substances in the world. Both are significantly associated with the increasing number of different diseases. Thus, monitoring nicotine and alcohol use is vital for public health planning and intervention strategies. This study aimed to calculate estimates of alcohol and nicotine use in 11 cities of Turkey using wastewater-based epidemiology. In 2019, daily composite wastewater samples from 18 wastewater treatment plants were collected for a week per season. The 24-h composite samples were collected via auto-samplers. Sample preparation for wastewater samples collected was done using liquid-liquid extraction and solid-phase extraction. Nicotine and ethyl sulfate (EtS) were analyzed using validated liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method. The estimated average nicotine consumption was 2.84 mg/p/day, and the average alcohol consumption was 3.46 ± 1.83 ml/p/day. The highest nicotine consumption was observed in Kayseri city; the highest alcohol consumption was calculated for Mersin city. In this study, the cigarette and alcohol consumption estimate obtained by wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) was found to be higher than the Turkey Tobacco and Alcohol Market Regulatory Authority report. To our knowledge, this study is the most comprehensive one so far applied using WBE for 11 cities in Turkey and evaluates alcohol and nicotine use together.

Topics & Concepts

NicotineEnvironmental healthWastewaterAlcoholEnvironmental scienceEpidemiologyCotinineMedicineToxicologyEnvironmental engineeringChemistryBiologyInternal medicineBiochemistrySmoking Behavior and CessationAlcohol Consumption and Health EffectsAdvanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
Estimation of alcohol and nicotine consumption in 11 cities of Turkey using wastewater‐based epidemiology | Litcius