Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa water, Sanitation Mar- Apr 2015 Vol.10 No.2 | Page 38

Roundup The Okavango Delta 1000th World Heritage site chlorine and ultraviolet light before it reaches customers,” CNN reported. The Okavango Delta in northwestern Botswana was crowned as the 1000th World Heritage site. A vast fanshaped plain, its extraordinary annual flood occurring in the dry season supports one of the greatest concentrations of wildlife in Africa, including threatened large mammals such as the Cheetah, the White and Black Rhinoceros and the Lion. It also provides livelihoods for thousands of people living in and around the delta, many of whom have conserved the area for generations. How was the employee caught? San Francisco Water Planner Suspended For Urinating In Reservoir Energy drinks raise resting blood pressure, with effect most dramatic in those not used to caffeine By Sara Jerome Healthy young adults who don’t consume caffeine regularly experienced greater rise in resting blood pressure after consumption of a commercially available energy drink -- compared to a placebo drink -- thus raising the concern that energy drinks may increase the risk of cardiac events, Mayo Clinic researchers found. Image credit: “Golden Gate,” evoo73 © 2011, used under an Attribution 2.0 Generic license: https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ Reservoirs and urinals are not the same thing. Though seemingly obvious, this point seems to have eluded a midlevel San Francisco water manager this year. “San Francisco Public Utilities Commission spokesman Tyrone Jue said in February that the agency confirmed anonymous complaints that maintenance planner Martin Sanchez had urinated in the 674-milliongallon reservoir in the Sierra Nevada foothills early last month,” the Associated Press reported. Public health was not placed in danger, the report said, noting that the reservoir had been drained for maintenance. “There is no public health risk to be concerned about because the reservoir was not in use and the fact (is) any water would have been treated anyway,” Jue said, per CNN. “Still, his actions are completely unacceptable.” San Francisco depends heavily on reservoir water. “The Priest Reservoir is a 674 million-gallon basin, located about 150 miles east of San Francisco, that provides water for 2.6 million people in the San Francisco Bay Area. The water in the reservoir is untreated and disinfected with 38 Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • March - April 2015 “An anonymous complaint to higher-ups [alleged] that a number of employees had seen Sanchez urinate ‘several times’ in the reservoir — including the day they learned he had passed an interview for a management promotion and that they would soon be reporting to him,” the San Francisco Chronicle reported. San Francisco is not alone in facing this issue. “Last April, Portland, Oregon, [dumped] 38 million gallons of water from a reservoir after a teen urinated in it. A security camera captured the 19-year-old, with the help of two friends, climbing a fence surrounding the reservoir and, ahem, taking care of business,” CNN reported. This exermpt has been reprinted with permission. Source: Water Online Results of the study will be presented March 14 at the American College of Cardiology’s 64th Annual Scientific Session in San Diego. In this study, researchers alternately gave a can of a commercially available energy drink or a placebo drink to 25 healthy young adults, age 19 to 40, and assessed changes in heart rate and blood pressure. Blood pressure and heart rate were recorded before and 30 minutes after energy drink/placebo drink consumption, and were also compared between caffeine-naïve participants (those consuming less than 160 mg of caffeine per day, the amount frequently found in a cup of coffee) and regular caffeine users (those consuming more than 160 mg of caffeine per day). Participants experienced a marked rise in blood pressure after consuming the energy drink as compared to the placebo. The effect was most dramatic in people who did not typically consume much caffeine, researchers found. Overall, the blood pressure increase was more than doubled in caffeine naïve adults after consuming the energy drink vs. placebo, they found. Source: Mayo Clinic