| Literature DB >> 31771211 |
Emma J Kuhn1, G Stewart Walker1, Harriet Whiley1, Jackie Wright1,2, Kirstin E Ross1.
Abstract
Contamination of residential homes with methamphetamine is an emerging issue of significant concern to public health. Cooking or smoking methamphetamine in a residential property contaminates the house, furnishings and personal possessions within it, with subsequent exposure through ingestion, dermal absorption and/or inhalation causing adverse health effects. Current guidelines identifying levels of methamphetamine contamination that require remediation vary between countries. There is also no international standard protocol for measuring levels of contamination and research has shown that different materials give rise to different recovery rates of methamphetamine. There are a number of currently used remediation methods; however, they have varying levels of success with limited studies comparing their long-term efficacies. Most importantly, there are few guidelines available that are based on a transparent, health risk-based approach, and there are many uncertainties on exposures and health effects, making it difficult to ensure the health of people residing in homes that have been used to cook or smoke methamphetamine are sufficiently protected. This manuscript presents the current state of knowledge regarding the contamination of residential homes with methamphetamine and identifies the current gaps in knowledge and priority areas for future research. The current regulatory approach to public health protection associated with exposure to residential premises contaminated with methamphetamine in Australia, New Zealand and the USA is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: guidelines; health risk; home; house; methamphetamine; third-hand exposure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31771211 PMCID: PMC6926576 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16234676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
A summary of methamphetamine decontamination limits from Australia, New Zealand and 23 states from the United States. This is not an exhaustive list of the US; information on all states can be found at Meth Lab Cleanup Company’s website [26].
| Country | Acceptable Level of Methamphetamine (µg/100 cm2) | Title | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | 0.5 | Clandestine drug laboratory remediation guidelines | [ |
| New Zealand | 1.5 | Testing and decontamination of methamphetamine contaminated properties | [ |
| California | 1.5 | Technical support documents and fact sheets | [ |
| Alaska | 0.1 | Guidance and standards for cleanup of illegal drug manufacturing sites | [ |
| Arkansas | 0.05 | Clandestine laboratory remediation cleanup standards | [ |
| Colorado | 4.0 for limited exposure areas | Cleanup of clandestine methamphetamine labs guidance document | [ |
| Connecticut | 0.1 | Guidelines for the cleanup of Connecticut methamphetamine labs | [ |
| Hawaii | 0.1 | Requirements for decontamination and cleanup of methamphetamine manufacturing sites | [ |
| Idaho | 0.1 | Guidelines for cleaning up former methamphetamine labs | [ |
| Indiana | 0.5 | Inspection and cleanup of property contaminated with chemicals used in the illegal manufacture of a controlled substance | [ |
| Kansas | 1.5 | Cleaning up former methamphetamine labs | [ |
| Kentucky | 0.1 | Kentucky cleanup guidance for methamphetamine contaminated properties | [ |
| Michigan | 0.5 | Cleanup of clandestine drug laboratory guidance | [ |
| Minnesota | 0.1 for former labs | Clandestine drug lab general cleanup guidance | [ |
| Montana | 0.1 | Methamphetamine contamination – Indoor property decontamination standards | [ |
| Nebraska | 0.1 | Methamphetamine cleanup | [ |
| New Hampshire | 0.1 | Guidance for the cleanup of clandestine chemical laboratories | [ |
| New Mexico | 1 | Clandestine drug laboratory remediation | [ |
| North Carolina | 0.1 | Illegal methamphetamine laboratory decontamination and re-occupancy guidelines | [ |
| South Dakota | 0.1 | Guidelines for contamination reduction | [ |
| Tennessee | 0.1 | Standards for testing and cleaning quarantined clandestine drug manufacturing sites | [ |
| Utah | 0.1 | Illegal drug operations decontamination standards | [ |
| Virginia | 1.5 | Guidelines for cleanup of residential property used to manufacture methamphetamine | [ |
| Washington | 1.5 | Guidelines for environmental sampling at illegal drug manufacturing sites | [ |
| Wyoming | 1.5 | Clandestine lab testing and remediation | [ |