Literature DB >> 20972613

The important health impact of where a child lives: neighborhood characteristics and the burden of lead poisoning.

Patrick M Vivier1, Marissa Hauptman, Sherry H Weitzen, Scott Bell, Daniela N Quilliam, John R Logan.   

Abstract

Toxins and other health threats can cause health problems, whether they are present in the child's own home, other neighborhood homes where the child spends time, or common areas such as playgrounds. We assess the impact of where a child lives on the burden of lead poisoning. Statewide lead screening data was obtained from the Rhode Island Department of Health. Block group level indicators of old housing and poverty were obtained from the US Census. Of the 204,746 study children, 35,416 (17.3%) had a blood lead level≥10 μg/dL. The proportion of study children who were lead poisoned in each block group ranged from 0.0 to 48.6%. The proportion of study children with an elevated blood lead level increased from 8% among children living in block groups in the lowest quintile of poverty to 31% for those in the highest quintile for poverty. Old housing also had an important impact on the risk of lead poisoning. The proportion of children with an elevated blood lead level increased from 7% among children living in block groups in the lowest quintile for pre-1950 housing to 27% for those in the highest quintile for pre-1950 housing. The adjusted odds ratio was 1.64 for the highest quintile of poverty and 1.77 for the highest quintile of pre-1950 housing. The findings of this large, statewide study demonstrate the powerful impact of where children live on the risk of lead poisoning. The findings have important implications for understanding the problem of lead poisoning and for planning primary prevention programs.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 20972613      PMCID: PMC3734857          DOI: 10.1007/s10995-010-0692-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Matern Child Health J        ISSN: 1092-7875


  14 in total

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5.  Screening for pediatric lead poisoning. Comparability of simultaneously drawn capillary and venous blood samples.

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Review 10.  Recent developments in low-level lead exposure and intellectual impairment in children.

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  14 in total

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Review 2.  A Review and Framework for Categorizing Current Research and Development in Health Related Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Studies.

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3.  The Relationship of Neighborhood Socioeconomic Differences and Racial Residential Segregation to Childhood Blood Lead Levels in Metropolitan Detroit.

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4.  Primary prevention of lead poisoning: protecting children from unsafe housing.

Authors:  Michelle L Rogers; James A Lucht; Alyssa J Sylvaria; Jessica Cigna; Robert Vanderslice; Patrick M Vivier
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5.  Asthma in US Mexican-Origin Children in Early Childhood: Differences in Risk and Protective Factors by Parental Nativity.

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6.  "Everything that looks good ain't good!": perspectives on urban redevelopment among persons with a history of injection drug use in Baltimore, Maryland.

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7.  Enhanced stimulus sequence-dependent repeated learning in male offspring after prenatal stress alone or in conjunction with lead exposure.

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8.  Effects of Individual and Neighborhood Characteristics on Childhood Blood Lead Testing and Elevated Blood Lead Levels, A Pennsylvania Birth Cohort Analysis.

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9.  Social vulnerability and traumatic dental injury among Brazilian schoolchildren: a population-based study.

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Review 10.  The urban lead (Pb) burden in humans, animals and the natural environment.

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