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Perverse Reverse Price Competition: Average Wholesale Prices and Medicaid Pharmaceutical Spending
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Judith Hellerstein, University of Maryland; Mark Duggan, University of Pennsylvania; Abby Alpert, University of California Irvine; 2013-021
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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Pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and disinfectants in agricultural water sources
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Agricultural water withdrawals account for the largest proportion of global freshwater use. Increasing municipal water demands and droughts are straining agricultural water supplies. Therefore, alternative solutions to agricultural water crises are urgently needed, including the use of nontraditional water sources such as advanced treated wastewater or reclaimed water, brackish water, return flows, and effluent from produce processing facilities. However, it is critical to ensure that such usage does not compromise soil, crop, and public health. Here, we characterized five different nontraditional water types (n = 357 samples) for the presence of pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and disinfectants using ultra-high-pressure liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry based method (UPLC-MS/MS). We then evaluated whether the levels of these contaminants were influenced by season. The highest level of herbicides (atrazine) was detected in untreated pond water (median concentration 135.9 ng/L). Reclaimed water had the highest levels of antibiotics and stimulants including azithromycin (215 ng/L), sulfamethoxazole (232.1 ng/L), and caffeine (89.4 ng/L). Produce processing plant water also tended to have high levels of atrazine (102.7 ng/L) and ciprofloxacin (80.1 ng/L). In addition, we observed seasonal variability across water types, with the highest atrazine concentrations observed during summer months, while the highest median azithromycin concentrations were observed in reclaimed water during the winter season. Further studies are needed to evaluate if economically feasible on-farm water treatment technologies can effectively remove such contaminants from nontraditional irrigation water sources.
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MPRC People
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Amir Sapkota, Ph.D.
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Amir Sapkota Publications
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Philip Cohen comments on Americans' dropping divorce rate on NPR
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Divorce has become more acceptable, less stigmatized, but also less common
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News
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Philip Cohen comments on the rising co-living arrangements
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Sharing households seems to be the solution facing rising housing costs in Miami
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News
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Philip Cohen quoted in Christian Science Monitor
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Comments on social stratification and remote work
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News
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Philip Cohen Takes a Stand in Controversy Over Gay Parenting Study
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Cohen calls for the resignation of the editor of Social Science Research after accusations of conflict of interest in the peer review process
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News
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Pia Orrenius, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
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Immigration and Labor Markets: An Overview
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Coming Up
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Pilar Gonalons-Pons, University of Pennsylvania
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The Care Work System. Changes and Continuities in the Provision of Care
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Coming Up
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Policing and Racism in America
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Panel session addresses systemic racism and its challenges
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Coming Up
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Population neuroscience: Challenges and recommendations for researchers
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Arianna Gard discusses generalizability and representation in large-scale neuroimaging datasets
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Research
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Selected Research