| Literature DB >> 24759656 |
Catherine Beaucham, Elena Page, Walter A Alarcon, Geoffrey M Calvert, Mark Methner, Todd M Schoonover.
Abstract
Indoor firing ranges are a source of lead exposure and elevated blood lead levels (BLLs) among employees, their families, and customers, despite public health outreach efforts and comprehensive guidelines for controlling occupational lead exposure. There are approximately 16,000-18,000 indoor firing ranges in the United States, with tens of thousands of employees. Approximately 1 million law enforcement officers train on indoor ranges. To estimate how many adults had elevated BLLs (≥10 µg/dL) as a result of exposure to lead from shooting firearms, data on elevated BLLs from the Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology and Surveillance (ABLES) program managed by CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) were examined by source of lead exposure. During 2002-2012, a total of 2,056 persons employed in the categories "police protection" and "other amusement and recreation industries (including firing ranges)" had elevated BLLs reported to ABLES; an additional 2,673 persons had non-work-related BLLs likely attributable to target shooting. To identify deficiencies at two indoor firing ranges linked to elevated BLLs, the Washington State Division of Occupational Safety and Health (WaDOSH) and NIOSH conducted investigations in 2012 and 2013, respectively. The WaDOSH investigation found a failure to conduct personal exposure and biologic monitoring for lead and also found dry sweeping of lead-containing dust. The NIOSH investigation found serious deficiencies in ventilation, housekeeping, and medical surveillance. Public health officials and clinicians should ask about occupations and hobbies that might involve lead when evaluating findings of elevated BLLs. Interventions for reducing lead exposure in firing ranges include using lead-free bullets, improving ventilation, and using wet mopping or high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) vacuuming to clean.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24759656 PMCID: PMC4584776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Number and percentage* of adults with elevated blood lead levels (≥10 μg/dL), by selected categories — Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology and Surveillance (ABLES) program, United States, 2002–2012
| Category | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | Total | |||||||||||
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| No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | |
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| Police Protection, NAICS code 92212 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| BLL ≥25 | 21 | (0.3) | 16 | (0.2) | 5 | (0.1) | 13 | (0.2) | 6 | (0.1) | 11 | (0.2) | 9 | (0.1) | 14 | (0.3) | 15 | (0.2) | 9 | (0.1) | 13 | (0.2) |
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| BLL 10–24 | 19 | (0.3) | 16 | (0.2) | 21 | (0.3) | 24 | (0.3) | 40 | (0.5) | 45 | (0.6) | 67 | (0.7) | 75 | (0.8) | 67 | (0.5) | 71 | (0.5) | 54 | (0.4) |
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| All Other Amusement and Recreation Industries, NAICS 71399 (including firing ranges) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| BLL ≥25 | 41 | (0.6) | 43 | (0.6) | 31 | (0.5) | 47 | (0.8) | 50 | (0.7) | 47 | (0.7) | 43 | (0.6) | 43 | (0.8) | 38 | (0.6) | 125 | (1.8) | 145 | (2.5) |
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| BLL 10–24 | 15 | (0.2) | 18 | (0.3) | 24 | (0.3) | 51 | (0.7) | 43 | (0.5) | 58 | (0.7) | 71 | (0.8) | 64 | (0.7) | 91 | (0.7) | 125 | (0.9) | 212 | (1.6) |
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| Total exposed at work (including non–firearm-related exposures) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| BLL ≥25 | 6,768 | — | 7,194 | — | 6,496 | — | 5,545 | — | 6,878 | — | 6,625 | — | 6,657 | — | 5,351 | — | 6,882 | — | 6,890 | — | 5,793 | — |
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| BLL 10–24 | 7,390 | — | 6,396 | — | 7,133 | — | 7,656 | — | 7,821 | — | 7,888 | — | 9,026 | — | 9,355 | — | 12,211 | — | 14,093 | — | 13,140 | — |
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| Target shooting | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| BLL ≥25 | 98 | (24.9) | 100 | (27.8) | 95 | (31.3) | 98 | (30.2) | 131 | (34.0) | 121 | (34.0) | 123 | (35.9) | 103 | (30.4) | 138 | (39.4) | 136 | (33.8) | 147 | (37.5) |
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| BLL 10–24 | 33 | (18.4) | 56 | (24.8) | 79 | (25.8) | 71 | (26.3) | 70 | (21.0) | 87 | (20.8) | 75 | (17.3) | 160 | (28.7) | 188 | (25.5) | 272 | (31.3) | 292 | (38.2) |
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| Total not exposed at work (including non–firearm-related exposures) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| BLL ≥25 | 393 | — | 360 | — | 304 | — | 325 | — | 385 | — | 356 | — | 343 | — | 339 | — | 350 | — | 402 | — | 392 | — |
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| BLL 10–24 | 179 | — | 226 | — | 306 | — | 270 | — | 334 | — | 419 | — | 433 | — | 557 | — | 738 | — | 869 | — | 764 | — |
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| Total with unknown source of exposure | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| BLL ≥25 | 888 | (11.0) | 1,588 | (17.4) | 1,354 | (16.6) | 714 | (10.8) | 1,262 | (14.8) | 1,710 | (19.7) | 2,151 | (23.5) | 2,173 | (27.6) | 1,329 | (15.5) | 904 | (11.0) | 742 | (10.7) |
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| BLL 10–24 | 4,096 | (35.1) | 3,669 | (35.7) | 3,645 | (32.9) | 3,190 | (28.7) | 3,187 | (28.1) | 2,976 | (26.4) | 3,877 | (29.1) | 3,767 | (27.5) | 7,203 | (35.7) | 4,565 | (23.4) | 4,689 | (25.2) |
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| BLL ≥25 | 8,049 | — | 9,142 | — | 8,154 | — | 6,584 | — | 8,525 | — | 8,691 | — | 9,151 | — | 7,863 | — | 8,561 | — | 8,196 | — | 6,927 | — |
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| BLL 10–24 | 11,665 | — | 10,291 | — | 11,084 | — | 11,116 | — | 11,342 | — | 11,283 | — | 13,336 | — | 13,679 | — | 20,152 | — | 19,527 | — | 18,593 | — |
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| BLL ≥25 | 28 | — | 31 | — | 33 | — | 32 | — | 35 | — | 35 | — | 38 | — | 39 | — | 39 | — | 39 | — | 39 | — |
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| BLL 10–24 | 10 | — | 11 | — | 14 | — | 13 | — | 14 | — | 16 | — | 19 | — | 23 | — | 31 | — | 30 | — | 33 | — |
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Abbreviations: BLL = blood lead level; NAICS = North American Industry Classification System.
Percentage of the total reported per year by BLL group in the relevant category (e.g., in the industry subsector, it represents the proportion exposed at work).
Fewer states provide work-relatedness and industry data for BLLs of 10–24 μg/dL, compared with BLLs ≥25 μg/dL.
Deficiencies contributing to elevated blood lead levels identified during the investigation of an indoor firing range — CDC’s National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, California, 2013
| Deficiency type | Problem observed |
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| Range ventilation system | Airflow at the firing line contained regions of backflow, causing lead to be carried back into the shooter’s breathing zone instead of downrange. |
| Building ventilation system | Openings in the wall between the firing range and the rest of the building allowed lead to be circulated throughout the building. |
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| Range housekeeping | Carpet and porous materials were present inside the shooting range. |
| Building housekeeping | Lead was detected on carpets, desks, tables, counters, eating surfaces, and ventilation supply and return air ducts outside the range. It was also detected inside the clean clothing bins and on towels that had been laundered by a commercial launderer. |
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| Employees | No employees had undergone the required medical surveillance. |
National Toxicology Program (NTP) conclusions regarding evidence of the principal health effects of low-level lead exposures in adults — United States, 2013
| Health area | BLL | Principal health effects | NTP conclusion regarding evidence |
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| Neurologic | <10 | Increased incidence of essential tremor | Sufficient |
| <10 | Psychiatric effects, decreased hearing, decreased cognitive function, increased incidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | Limited | |
| <5 | Increased incidence of essential tremor | Limited | |
| Immune | Unclear | — | Inadequate |
| Cardiovascular | <10 | Increased blood pressure and increased risk of hypertension | Sufficient |
| <10 | Increased cardiovascular-related mortality and electrocardiographic abnormalities | Limited | |
| Renal | <5 | Decreased glomerular filtration rate | Sufficient |
| Reproductive | <5 | Women: reduced fetal growth | Sufficient |
| ≥15–20 | Men: adverse changes in sperm parameters and increased time to pregnancy | Sufficient | |
| <10 | Women: increase in spontaneous abortion and preterm birth | Limited | |
| ≥10 | Men: decreased fertility | Limited | |
| ≥31 | Men: spontaneous abortion in partner | Limited | |
| Unclear | Women and men: stillbirth, endocrine effects, birth defects | Inadequate |
Adapted from: National Toxicology Program. Health effects of low-level lead evaluation. Research Triangle Park, NC: US Department of Health and Human Services, National Toxicology Program; 2013. Available at http://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/36443.