Imperial Valley Press

US lowers cutoff for lead poisoning in young children

- BY MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK – U. S. health officials have changed their definition of lead poisoning in young children – a move expected to more than double the number of kids with worrisome levels of the toxic metal in their blood.

The more stringent standard announced Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention means the number of children ages 1 to 5 considered to have high blood lead levels will grow from about 200,000 to about 500,000.

Some experts think the change was overdue. The CDC last changed the definition nine years ago and pledged to consider an update every four years. But work on a revision hit obstacles during the Trump administra­tion, said Patrick Breysse, who heads the CDC’s National Center for Environmen­tal Health.

Children can be exposed to lead through bits of old paint, contaminat­ed dust, and – in some cities – drinking water that passes through lead pipes. The metal accumulate­s in the body, and at very high levels it can damage organs and cause seizures.

But it can have insidious effects at lower levels, too – especially in young children. Kids can absorb four to five times as much lead as adults exposed to the same source, harming children’s brain developmen­t and leading to attention and behavior problems.

“There is no safe lead level,” Dr. Marissa Hauptman, a pediatrici­an at Boston Children’s Hospital who sees children exposed to lead.

When a child is found to have elevated blood lead levels, public health officials are supposed to try to find the source and take steps to clean it up. Hauptman said she hoped the standard change would come with additional funding for that work, but CDC officials said there was now new funding accompanyi­ng Thursday’s

announceme­nt.

Lead poisoning is assessed using a measuremen­t of micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. In the late 1970s, the average blood lead level in U.S. children ages 1 to 5 was 15 micrograms per deciliter. The most recently reported measure, covering the years 2011-2016, was 0.83 micrograms.

That drop among U.S. kids was attributed to laws that phased out the use of lead in paints and gasoline and other prevention and clean-up efforts. But as overall lead levels dropped, scientists accumulate­d evidence that even small amounts of lead can affect intellectu­al developmen­t.

In 1991, the standard for children was set at 10 micrograms per deciliter. In 2012, it was reduced to 5 micrograms. The

new standard announced Thursday is 3.5 micrograms.

The change has been in the works for years. Health officials concluded in the waning days of the Obama administra­tion that the standard should be lowered. But during the Trump administra­tion it failed to achieve the necessary signoffs from entities like the White House Office of Management and Budget, Breysse said.

“This administra­tion is more supportive,” he said.

David Rosner, a Columbia University public health historian, said the CDC is “vulnerable to the political winds.”

“The fact that they are doing it now is an indication they feel a little freed up,” said Rosner, who has co-authored books about lead poisoning and other forms of pollution.

 ?? AP ?? In this June 17 file photo, a lead water service line from 1927 lies on the surface of a residentia­l street after being removed in Denver.
AP In this June 17 file photo, a lead water service line from 1927 lies on the surface of a residentia­l street after being removed in Denver.

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