Tooth fairy study reveals children near lead smelters are exposed to dangerous lead in the womb
- Written by Jill Johnston, Assistant Professor of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California
The environmental tragedy in Flint, Michigan, in which drinking water contaminated with lead raised fears of potential health effects for exposed children, revealed the failure of a regulatory system[1] to protect residents from lead exposure.
Until 2015 the Exide Technologies lead-acid battery smelter, in southeast Los Angeles County, California, recycled approximately 11 million lead acid batteries[2] per year while operating on temporary state permits. This violated multiple federal environmental regulations[3] and exposed over 100,000 residents to lead and other toxic metals. The result was large-scale environmental disaster with lead contamination[4] of the air and soil in largely Latino communities.
As an environmental scientist and epidemiologist, I sought to understand lead pollution in children growing up in this area. For my research I collaborated with local community organizations and relied on an archive of biological samples that families often save: baby teeth.
References
- ^ failure of a regulatory system (doi.org)
- ^ 11 million lead acid batteries (doi.org)
- ^ violated multiple federal environmental regulations (graphics.latimes.com)
- ^ lead contamination (www.latimes.com)
- ^ USC Environmental Health Centers (envhealthcenters.usc.edu)
- ^ CC BY-SA (creativecommons.org)
- ^ Truth Fairy Project (doi.org)
- ^ My team compared the levels of lead (doi.org)
- ^ USC Environmental Health Centers (envhealthcenters.usc.edu)
- ^ CC BY-SA (creativecommons.org)
- ^ no safe threshold of childhood lead exposure (doi.org)
- ^ damage to almost all organs and organ systems (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- ^ Cognitive deficits (doi.org)
- ^ even very low levels of Pb exposure (doi.org)
- ^ 500,000 children still burdened by elevated blood lead levels (doi.org)
- ^ Outdated regulations for lead (doi.org)
- ^ USC Environmental Health Centers (envhealthcenters.usc.edu)
- ^ CC BY-SA (creativecommons.org)
- ^ ambient air emissions from lead-smelting (doi.org)
- ^ through recycling lead-acid batteries (www3.cec.org)
- ^ a few urban communities in the U.S. (doi.org)
- ^ disproportionately borne by disadvantaged communities (doi.org)
- ^ investigating causes of elevated blood lead levels (doi.org)
Authors: Jill Johnston, Assistant Professor of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California