Toxic Impact of Lead Exposure Is Much Greater Than We Knew, Report Warns
Leaded fuel might be a thing of the past, but a new report from The World Bank reveals the chemical’s toxic legacy continues to take a toll worldwide.
What’s worse, the ongoing harmful impacts of lead exposure are far greater than we thought, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where lead contamination is more common in food, soils, paint, battery recycling, metal mining, and agricultural products.
We’ve been aware of the dangers of lead since Ancient Rome, when it was known to cause neurological damage and even death at high levels. But while acute lead poisoning is certainly something to avoid, even very low levels of regular lead exposure can have chronic detrimental effects.
These include cardiovascular disease in adults, and neuropsychological problems – including lower IQ scores and increased behavioral issues – in children.
In the 20th century, leaded fuels were the main source of exposure. The UN began a campaign to phase them out in 2002, and by 2021 they were officially off the market.
While this international effort has significantly reduced blood lead levels across the world, a recent modelling study by environmental specialists Bjorn Larsen and Ernesto Sánchez-Triana shows the heavy burden of lead exposure is far from lifted.
Conservative estimates suggest that in 2019, 5.5 million adults died from cardiovascular disease related to lead exposure – that’s six times higher than previously estimated. The researchers also estimated that in 2019, 765 million IQ points were lost from the population of children aged 5 or younger, as a result of exposure to lead.
These impacts were greatest in LMICs, where 95 percent of the total global IQ in young children was lost, and 90 percent of the cardiovascular disease deaths occurred.
IQ losses in these countries were nearly 80 percent higher than previously thought.
“The highest cost of IQ loss as a share of GDP [gross domestic product] was in low-income countries and sub-Saharan Africa due to a combination of high blood lead levels and high birth rates,” Larsen and Sánchez-Triana write.
The LMICs of Europe and central Asia experienced the greatest impacts of cardiovascular disease mortality from lead exposure.
“The high cost and mortality rate is due to the high susceptibility to cardiovascular disease and cardiovascular mortality in these countries’ aging populations,” Larsen and Sánchez-Triana say, “whereas the main reason for the low cardiovascular disease mortality rate in sub-Saharan Africa is a young population and low baseline cardiovascular disease rate.”
The global cost of lead exposure was US$6 trillion in 2019 – around 6.9 percent of global GDP. Of this total amount, 77 percent was due to the welfare cost of cardiovascular disease mortality, and 23 percent was the estimated present value of future income losses from IQ loss.
“The estimate of the global health burden of lead exposure in this study places lead exposure as an environmental risk factor at par with PM2.5 ambient and household air pollution combined, and ahead of unsafe household drinking water, sanitation, and handwashing,” write Larsen and Sánchez-Triana.
The authors say more comprehensive national blood lead level measurements are needed worldwide, and that it’s important for nations to identify and remove sources of lead exposure. They also note that the global health effects and costs of other chemicals need to be quantified in similar ways.
The research was published in The Lancet Planetary Health.
Source: Science Alert
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“Conservative estimates suggest that in 2019, 5.5 million adults died from cardiovascular disease related to lead exposure – that’s six times higher than previously estimated.”
How can there be a conservative estimate based on a stated previously wrong estimate? Facts work better instead of fantasy.
Since the African area hung on to leaded until recently, that would explain the current issues there, yes? Also, since lead is in the environment and won’t be removed, it’s going to have an effect until it is, which perhaps will be when enough people and animals have consumed it all.
Lead still exists in house piping, and on roofing, where it runs down with the rain.
https://tonyladson.wordpress.com/2015/09/29/influence-of-roofing-materials-and-lead-flashing-on-rainwater-tank-contamination-by-metals/
It’s a big job to get rid of it completely.
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K. Kaiser
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Lack of knowledge of chemistry = lack of understanding of toxicological effects.
For example, the ancient Roman (nobility / elite) used “lead acetate” as sweetener, sort of like we use sugar. That compound is highly soluble and, definitely toxic.
In contrast, lead sulfide, widely found in nature as grey crystals is next to insoluble, and of no toxicological concern.
Lead metal (as formerly used for piping of potable water (mainly for the short spurs from city mains to surrounding houses were of little concern as well. Ours was replaced with a larger diameter copper pipe as it got clogged with lime deposits in this “hard water” area.
Just to show you a vivid example of the importance of differentiating between a metal and one of its derivatives: A piece of sodium metal added to water will result in an explosive reaction. Sodium chloride, is widely consumed in the form of “table salt” and has been used for millennia to conserve perishable food.
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