| Literature DB >> 35101975 |
Jacqueline MacDonald Gibson1, John M MacDonald2, Michael Fisher3, Xiwei Chen4, Aralia Pawlick4, Philip J Cook5.
Abstract
Early life exposure to environmental lead (Pb) has been linked to decreased IQ, behavior problems, lower lifetime earnings, and increased criminal activity. Beginning in the 1970s, limits on Pb in paint, gasoline, food cans, and regulated water utilities sharply curtailed US environmental Pb exposure. Nonetheless, hundreds of thousands of US children remain at risk. This study reports on how unregulated private well water is an underrecognized Pb exposure source that is associated with an increased risk of teenage juvenile delinquency. We build a longitudinal dataset linking blood Pb measurements for 13,580 children under age 6 to their drinking water source, individual- and neighborhood-level demographics, and reported juvenile delinquency records. We estimate how early life Pb exposure from private well water influences reported delinquency. On average, children in homes with unregulated private wells had 11% higher blood Pb than those with community water service. This higher blood Pb was significantly associated with reported delinquency. Compared to children with community water service, those relying on private wells had a 21% (95% CI: 5 to 40%) higher risk of being reported for any delinquency and a 38% (95% CI: 10 to 73%) increased risk of being reported for serious delinquency after age 14. These results suggest that there could be substantial but as-yet-unrecognized social benefits from intervention programs to prevent children's exposure to Pb from private wells, on which 13% of the US population relies.Entities:
Keywords: children's health; drinking water; juvenile delinquency; lead exposure; private well water
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35101975 PMCID: PMC8832992 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2110694119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Summary statistics for full dataset
| Variable | Full sample | Community water | Private well | |
| N | 13,372 | 11,209 | 2,163 | |
| | ||||
| Gender (N) (%) | 0.847 | |||
| Female | 6,658 (50.2) | 5,580 (50.2) | 1,078 (50.4) | |
| Male | 6,597 (49.8) | 5,537 (49.8) | 1,060 (49.6) | |
| Race (N) (%) | <0.001 | |||
| All other | 9,758 (73.0) | 8,044 (71.8) | 1,714 (79.2) | |
| Non-Hispanic Black | 3,614 (27.0) | 3,165 (28.2) | 449 (20.8) | |
| Age at time of Pb test, months (N) (%) | 0.259 | |||
| 0 to 8 | 93 (0.695) | 79 (0.705) | 14 (0.647) | |
| 9 to 14 | 7,324 (54.8) | 6,106 (54.5) | 1,218 (56.3) | |
| 15 to 19 | 904 (6.76) | 757 (6.75) | 147 (6.80) | |
| 20 to 29 | 1,977 (14.8) | 1,650 (14.7) | 327 (15.2) | |
| >30 | 3,074 (23.0) | 2,617 (23.3) | 457 (21.1) | |
| Age indicator (mean) (SD) | 0.798 (0.310) | 0.797 (0.311) | 0.803 (0.304) | 0.465 |
| Year of blood test (mean) (SD) | 2005 (1.88) | 2005 (1.88) | 2005 (1.86) | 0.107 |
| Blood draw type (N) (%) | 0.971 | |||
| Capillary | 1,301 (10.7) | 1,091 (10.7) | 210 (10.7) | |
| Venous | 10,815 (89.3) | 9,065 (89.3) | 1,750 (89.3) | |
| | ||||
| Blood Pb, µg/dL (mean) (SD) | 2.30 (1.77) | 2.36 (1.78) | 2.52 (1.65) | <0.001 |
| Blood Pb ≥ 5 µg/dL (N) (%) | 1,241 (9.28) | 1,006 (8.97) | 235 (10.9) | 0.006 |
| Any juvenile complaint (N) (%) | 415 (3.10) | 351 (3.13) | 64 (2.96) | 0.672 |
| Number of juvenile complaints (mean) (SD) | 0.122 (1.251) | 0.117 (1.223) | 0.144 (1.386) | 0.688 |
| Any serious complaint (N (%)) | 191 (1.43) | 160 (1.43) | 31 (1.43) | 0.983 |
| Number of serious complaints (mean) (SD) | 0.0462 (0.606) | 0.0435 (0.579) | 0.0587 (0.730) | 0.975 |
| | ||||
| Home value (mean) (SD) | $226,468 ($194,458) | $226,448 ($180,381) | $226,575 ($257,904) | 0.984 |
| Built before 1978 (N) (%) | 3,847 (29.7) | 3,249 (29.5) | 598 (31.0) | 0.171 |
| Year built (N) (%) | <0.001 | |||
| Before 1950 | 863 (6.66) | 739 (6.59) | 124 (6.43) | |
| 1950–1977 | 2,984 (23.0) | 2,510 (22.8) | 474 (24.6) | |
| 1978–1987 | 1,959 (15.1) | 1,676 (15.2) | 283 (14.7) | |
| 1988–1997 | 2,673 (20.6) | 2,191 (19.9) | 482 (25.0) | |
| 1998–2002 | 2,941 (22.7) | 2,599 (23.6) | 342 (17.7) | |
| 2003 or later | 1,539 (11.9) | 1,315 (11.9) | 224 (11.6) | |
| | ||||
| Median income (mean) (SD) | $71,839 ($31,797) | $69,729 ($31,149) | $82,795 ($32,866) | <0.001 |
| % Black (mean) (SD) | 0.274 (0.233) | 0.287 (0.242) | 0.210 (0.168) | <0.001 |
| | ||||
| Median income (mean) (SD) | $76,069 ($33,635) | $75,863 ($33,785) | $77,134 ($32,833) | 0.058 |
| % Black (mean) (SD) | 0.252 (0.224) | 0.257 (0.229) | 0.225 (0.194) | <0.001 |
Fig. 1.Locations of children in households relying on private wells (blue dots) and of those with at least one report for delinquency (red crosses).
Influence of water source and other variables on blood Pb in early childhood
| Variable | Model 1: Full dataset (n = 13,580) | Model 2: Quasi-experimental matched dataset (n = 3,898) |
| Private well water (reference = community water) | 1.11*** | 1.11*** |
| Year of blood test | 0.889*** | 0.894*** |
| Home value (natural log) | 0.921*** | 0.899*** |
| Construction year of residence during early childhood (reference = before 1950) | ||
| 1950 through1977 | 0.869*** | 0.835** |
| 1978 through 1987 | 0.818*** | 0.819** |
| 1988 through 1997 | 0.786*** | 0.818** |
| 1998 through 2002 | 0.720*** | 0.723*** |
| 2003 or later | 0.781*** | 0.775*** |
| Age at time of blood test, months (reference ≤ 9 mo) | ||
| 9 through 14 | 1.11 | 1.65 |
| 15 through 19 | 1.35*** | 2.14 |
| 20 through 29 | 1.37*** | 2.08 |
| >30 | 1.32*** | 1.93 |
| Blood draw type venous (reference = capillary) | 1.20*** | 1.23*** |
| Black race (reference = all other races) | 1.27*** | 1.20*** |
| Male sex at birth (reference = female) | 1.02 | 0.994 |
| Census block group median income (natural log) at time of blood test | 0.958 | 0.954 |
| Census block group % Black at time of blood test | 1.03 | 0.813 |
| Census block group median income (natural log) at age 14 | 0.973 | 1.025 |
| Census block group % Black at age 14 | 1.19*** | 1.48*** |
| Fraction of age 16 reached at end of data collection | 0.888*** | 0.879 |
*Exponentiated coefficients from model of natural log of blood Pb regressed on all variables indicated with controls for zip code ().
†1,949 children in the dataset relying on private well water were matched to 1,949 with community-supplied water on race, biological sex, age at time of blood test, blood test year, year home was built, and home value quartile.
***P < 0.001; **P < 0.01; *P < 0.05
Fig. 2.(Top) Fraction of children in the full sample sample (n = 13,580) reported to the juvenile justice system for any act of delinquency (Left) or serious delinquency (Right) as a function of early life blood Pb. (Bottom) Number of juvenile complaints against children in the dataset as a function of early life blood Pb.
Influence of blood Pb on risk that a child will be reported for juvenile delinquency at age 14 or older
| Variable | Model 1: Full dataset (n = 13,580) | Model 2: Quasi-experimental matched dataset (n = 3,898) |
| Any delinquency | ||
| Blood Pb (natural log) predicted from water source and other variables (stage 1 model; | 3.27*** | 6.35*** |
| Age indicator | 3.05*** | 2.21 |
| Male sex at birth (reference = female) | 2.51*** | 3.44*** |
| Black race (reference = all other) | 2.78*** | 4.01*** |
| Census block group median income (natural log) at age 14 | 0.437*** | 0.284*** |
| Census block group % Black at age 14 | 1.19 | 0.480 |
| Serious delinquency | ||
| Blood Pb (natural log) predicted from water source and other variables (stage 1 model; | 4.39*** | 23.4*** |
| Age indicator | 2.36 | 2.88 |
| Male sex at birth (reference = female) | 3.33*** | 2.86** |
| Black race (reference = all other) | 3.05*** | 2.82** |
| Census block group median income (natural log) at age 14 | 0.431*** | 0.295** |
| Census block group % Black at age 14 | 1.29 | 0.419 |
*Exponentiated coefficient from logistic regression model with reported delinquency as dependent variable.
†1,949 children in the dataset relying on private well water were matched to 1,949 with community-supplied water on race, biological sex, age at time of blood test, blood test year, year home was built, and home value quartile.
***P < 0.001; **P < 0.01
Odds of being reported for juvenile delinquency after age 14 for children on private well water, compared to children with community water
| Outcome | Model 1: Full dataset (n = 13,580) | Model 2: Quasi-experimental matched dataset (n = 3,898) |
| Any delinquency | 1.13 (1.05 to 1.21) | 1.21 (1.05 to 1.40) |
| Serious delinquency | 1.16 (1.06 to 1.27) | 1.38 (1.10 to 1.73) |
*Estimated from product of coefficient on well water in Table 1 and coefficient on log of blood Pb in Table 2
†1,949 children in the dataset relying on private well water were matched to 1,949 with community-supplied water on race, biological sex, age at time of blood test, blood test year, year home was built, and home value quartile.
Fig. 3.Probability that a child will be reported to the juvenile justice system by age, water source, and race for a population representative of the children in this sample relying on private well water. Solid lines represent the status quo. Dashed lines represent the potential change in delinquency risk if the children were supplied with treated water from a community supply, in place of their private well water. Black lines represent Black children, and red lines show children of all other races. These predictions were generated using Eqs. through . Age at the time of blood test was set at 15 to 19 mo, construction year of house was fixed to 1988 to 1997, and all other independent variables were held constant at median values for the population of children on private wells.