| Literature DB >> 19654928 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study is a cost-benefit analysis that quantifies the social and economic benefits to household lead paint hazard control compared with the investments needed to minimize exposure to these hazards.Entities:
Keywords: cost-benefit; economics; housing; lead poisoning
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19654928 PMCID: PMC2717145 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.0800408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Demographics of childhood lead poisoning (%).
| Characteristic | BLL 2–10 μg/dL | Share of total population ≤ 6 years of age |
|---|---|---|
| Children ≤ 6 years of age | 24.7 | 100.0 |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 53.6 | 51.1 |
| Female | 46.4 | 48.9 |
| Race | ||
| White, non-Hispanic | 47.4 | 57.9 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 23.6 | 13.7 |
| Hispanic | 24.6 | 21.1 |
| Other | 4.6 | 7.3 |
| Income (% federal poverty line) | ||
| Up to 200% | 60.2 | 46.4 |
| 200–400% | 22.8 | 29.2 |
| ≥ 400% | 17.1 | 24.4 |
Author’s analysis of NHANES (2003–2006).
Shares of population ≤ 6 years of age by race do not match ratios in other data because of differences in sampling and definitions.
Health care costs (2006 USD).a
| Blood lead level (μg/dL) | Cost of recommended medical action ($) | Lower bound of affected children (no.) | Upper bound of affected children (no.) | Lower bound cost ($) | Upper bound cost ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10–15 | 74 | 24,554 | 120,656 | 1,816,996 | 8,928,552 |
| 15–20 | 74 | 8,185 | 40,220 | 605,690 | 2,976,305 |
| 20–45 | 1,207 | 6,347 | 31,189 | 7,660,829 | 37,644,611 |
| 45–70 | 1,335 | 376 | 1,848 | 501,960 | 2,466,585 |
| > 70 | 3,444 | 64 | 314 | 220,416 | 1,083,104 |
| All levels | 39,526 | 194,227 | 10,805,891 | 53,099,158 |
Kemper et al. (1998) provided estimates for the costs of recommended action (inflated to 2006 USD).
The upper bound values are calculated assuming that CDC state-level surveillance confirmed cases represent 20.35% of estimates > 10 μg/dL derived from NHANES (2003–2006): 39,536 confirmed cases to 194,227 cases as estimated from NHANES (2003–2006).
Lead and IQ.a
| BLL (μg/dL) | Lower bound of affected children (no.) | Upper bound of affected children (no.) | Average BLL per BLL group (μg/dL) | Average IQ point loss per μg/dL | Lower bound IQ loss | Upper bound IQ loss |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2–10 | 5,632,147 | 7,400,920 | 3.13 | 0.513 | 9,043,482 | 11,883,583 |
| 10–20 | 32,739 | 160,876 | ~ 15 | 0.19 | 199,053 | 978,129 |
| ≥ 20 | 6,678 | 32,815 | ~ 20 | 0.11 | 46,946 | 230,690 |
| Totals | 9,289,482 | 13,092,402 |
Data for children with BLLs < 10 μg/dL are estimated from CDC NHANES 2003–2006. Data for children > 10 μg/dL are from state-level surveillance and assume uniform distribution of cases within each BLL group. Lower and upper bound for 2- to 10-μg/dL group represents 95% CIs for NHANES estimate.
Average BLL calculated for 2–10 μg/dL using CDC NHANES 2003–2006, average BLL for 10–20 μg/dL taken as the midpoint, and average BLL for ≥ 20 μg/dL group uses the most conservative lower bound (the floor) for the mean.
Data from Lanphear et al. (2005); assume uniform decreases within BLL groups.
Values calculated assuming that CDC confirmed cases represent 20.35% of all cases, given that CDC confirmed cases represent 20.35% of NHANES estimates for those > 10 μg/dL.
Lead and crime.
| Crime | All crimes per 100,000 residents (no.) | Lead-linked crimes per 100,000 residents (no.) | Total lead linked crimes (no.) | Direct costs per crime ($) | Total direct costs ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burglaries | 1335.7 | 38.7 | 116,541 | 4,010 | 467,329,410 |
| Robberies | 213.7 | 0.83 | 2,499 | 22,871 | 57,154,379 |
| Aggravated assaults | 352.9 | 17.9 | 53,904 | 20,363 | 1,097,628,286 |
| Rape | 37.6 | 1.39 | 4,186 | 28,415 | 118,945,567 |
| Murder | 8.3 | 0.238 | 717 | 31,110 | 22,305,512 |
| Totals | 177,847 | 1,763,363,153 |
Calculated using crime incidence data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (2006).
Data from Nevin (2006).
Data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics (2004); inflated to 2006 USD.
Total costs and benefits of lead control.
| Conservative estimate | Optimistic estimate | |
|---|---|---|
| Total benefit from lead reduction | $192.38 | $270.45 |
| Total cost of lead control | $11.02 | $1.22 |
| Total net benefit | $181.37 | $269.23 |
| Cost–benefit | 1–17 | 1–221 |
All costs and benefits are in billions of 1996 dollars.