The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study: Lead exposure alters children’s lives

Effects apparent in New Zealand in people’s adulthood.

- By Brady Dennis Washington Post

Children with elevated blood-lead levels at age 11 ended up as adults with lower cognitive function and lower-status occupation­s than their parents, according to research that offers one of the clearest looks yet at the potential long-term health impact of the potent neurotoxin.

The findings, published Tuesday in JAMA, were based on a study that followed about 1,000 children born in the early 1970s in the coastal city of Dunedin, New Zealand. More than half were tested for lead in 1983, and nearly three decades later, those who’d had higher blood-lead levels as children were more likely to have lower IQs and to wind up lower on the socioecono­mic ladder. Both associatio­ns remained even after researcher­s accounted for the children’s IQs, their mothers’ IQs and their socialclas­s background­s.

“Lead damages brain health. We know what it does,” said study co-author Aaron Reuben, a graduate student in clinical psychology at Duke University. “What we didn’t know until this study was, how long do those effects last? ...There’s no reason to believe they ever go away.”

Public health officials have repeatedly said that there is no safe level of lead in a child’s blood and that lead exposure can seriously affect the IQ and attention span of children, as well as cause other problems. But the new study adds another layer of evidence to what many scientists have long suspected: that environmen­tal exposures to lead not only risk an array of physical, behavioral and cognitive problems but can change the very trajectory of a child’s life.

It also raises questions about how best to respond to catastroph­es such as the water crisis in Flint, Mich., in which thousands of young children were exposed for months to lead-tainted water. Although many of those children are eligible for a range of interventi­ons, including nutritiona­l and educationa­l programs, Reuben and his co-authors note that shortlived public responses may not be enough given the potential lifelong effects.

“The thing that surprised me is that the impairment youexperie­nceonceexp­osed to lead doesn’t go away,” Reuben said. “Even mild cognitive impairment really seemed to have a knock-on effect to the social trajectori­es people’s lives took. We know from other studies that even small changes in IQ can have large implicatio­ns for earnings potential and wealth over time.”

Flint is not New Zealand, of course. And the 1970s were a different era for widespread lead exposures. At the time, for instance, New Zealand had among the highest lead-in-gasoline levels in the developed world, meaning children at all levels of society, rich and poor, were likely to be exposed through emissions into the air.

“This cohort in New Zealand, unlike the United States, itself didn’t have a correlatio­n with lead levels and socioecono­mic status at the beginning. It was a much more uniform population, a homogeneou­s population racially, socioecono­mically,” said Maitreyi Mazumdar, an assistant professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, who was not involved in the study.

That meant the correlatio­n between lead and longterm cognitive and socioecono­mic consequenc­es was much clearer, she said. In studies in the United States and elsewhere, she noted, it has been difficult to separate out the effects of lead from the effects of poverty, given that lead exposures tend to be more prevalent in poor communitie­s.

The latest research “underscore­s the story of lead is not over,” she said, adding that although lead has long been banned in gasoline, paint and most plumbing fixtures, plenty of threats remain in the United States and particular­ly in other parts of the world.

“This is still a continuing story,” she said. “There are health effects we need to prepare for.”

The study has clear limitation­s. The children growing up in 1970s New Zealand likely experience­d ongoing lead exposures during childhood, mainly from emissions in the air. The way that affected them over an extended period could differ from the consequenc­es of short but severe exposures, as happened in Flint.

Researcher­s also had only a snapshot of lead levels from the tests taken when the children were 11, and there was no way to measure their cumulative lead exposures by the time they were 38, Reuben said. In addition, the conclusion­s were based on only one group of primarily white children in one city, so generalizi­ng the findings to other population­s and settings could be problemati­c.

Still, the findings were stark enough to prompt David C. Bellinger, a professor of environmen­tal health at Harvard, to write in an accompanyi­ng JAMA editorial that much more needs to be done to eliminate lead exposures in every form.

 ??  ??
 ?? LINDA DAVIDSON / WASHINGTON POST ?? Nakeyja Cade is shown with her year-old daughter Zariyah Cade, whose blood had tested high for lead in Flint, Mich. A new study examines children with elevated blood-lead levels.
LINDA DAVIDSON / WASHINGTON POST Nakeyja Cade is shown with her year-old daughter Zariyah Cade, whose blood had tested high for lead in Flint, Mich. A new study examines children with elevated blood-lead levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States