 while birds living near urban areas may be exposed to pharmaceutical drugs to the consumption of wastewater or garbage. This study examined the presence of several types of drugs in the blood of white storks in Madrid, Spain. The researchers found evidence of two drugs acetaminophen and marbofloxacin in 15 percent of the nestlings and 30 percent of the nests. These drugs were likely taken in by the birds from garbage or wastewater. The researchers suggest that these drugs may have been taken in by the birds from garbage or wastewater. They also note that the low levels of drug detected in the birds indicate that they may have been taken in by the birds from garbage or wastewater. The researchers recommend that control measures and echopharmacovigilance frameworks should be put in place to reduce the release of pharmaceutical compounds from the human population into the environment. This article was authored by Guillermo Blanco, Pilar Gomez Ramirez, Silvia Espin, and others.