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U.S. lowers threshold for lead poisoning in children

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ATLANTA | Thu May 17, 2012 12:08am EDT

ATLANTA (Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cut its threshold level for defining lead poisoning in children to 5 micrograms per deciliter on Wednesday from 10, marking the first such reduction in 20 years.

"The recommendation was based on a growing number of scientific studies showing that even low blood lead levels can cause lifelong health effects," the CDC said, in adopting the recommendation of an advisory committee. "Today, CDC is officially announcing our agreement with that recommendation."

The new "reference value" for lead poisoning was based on the population of U.S. children aged 1 to 5 years whose blood lead levels are in the highest 2.5 percent of children tested, the agency said.

About 450,000 U.S. children aged 1 to 5 have blood lead levels above the new standard, up from 250,000 with lead levels greater than 10 micrograms per deciliter of blood under the previous threshold, according to the CDC.

High levels of lead in a child's blood can cause coma, convulsions and death, and even low levels can cause decreased intelligence and impaired hearing, the agency said.

The leading sources of lead exposure to U.S. children are lead-based paint, which was banned for use in housing in 1978, and lead-contaminated dust, the CDC said.

Despite the new guidelines, the CDC has no money to pay for expanded programs to fight lead poisoning, Christopher Portier, director of the CDC's National Center for Environmental Health, told Reuters.

In the 2012 fiscal year, Congress cut funding for the CDC's Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program to $2 million from $29.2 million, he said. But the agency can still work with public health departments, schools and other partners to help combat lead poisoning, Portier said.

"Parents can act without the CDC being there," Portier said, suggesting they could contact local health departments for testing of paint and dust to detect high lead levels.

The CDC also recommends parents regularly wash children's hands and toys, and wet-mop floors and windowsills, in addition to preventing children from playing in bare soil.

(Editing By Cynthia Johnston and Peter Cooney)

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Comments (1)
hello999 wrote:
What most people do not understand is that allowable levels of lead in public drinking water can cause harmful blood levels in children. There is currently no real limit on lead in drinking water. Water producers are required to take action if more than 10% of tap samples monitored are over a specified “action level” because the lead is generally not in the water as produced, but comes from lead in the plumbing. The water producers are required to take action to keep the water non-corrosive.

So, up to 10% of households in a community can have lead over the action level. And those 10% have no limit. http://water.epa.gov/lawsregs/rulesregs/sdwa/lcr/index.cfm. The action level is 15 ppb (parts per billion) of lead in drinking water.

A level of 15 ppb can result in a blood level around 5 micrograms per deciliter in a 1 to 3 year old child. http://ec.europa.eu/health/scientific_committees/environmental_risks/docs/scher_o_128.pdf, Table 1.

The ban on lead in pluming went into effect in most states around 1988. How old is your plumbing? Even now, “lead free” plumbing is not completely free of lead.

What’s in your water?

May 18, 2012 8:57pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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