Lead in school children from Morelos, Mexico: Levels, sources and feasible interventions
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Background: Lead is a pervasive pollutant, associated at low levels to many adverse health effects. Objective: To investigate lead levels, exposure pathways and intervention possibilities in school children from Alpuyeca, in Morelos, Mexico. Methods: Blood lead concentrations (BPb) were measured in 226 children in 2011. Exposure pathways were assessed through a questionnaire, lead measurements in different environmental matrices and spatial aggregation analysis of lead concentrations. Results: BPb ranged from 1.5 to 36.5 μg/dL, with a mean (SD) of 7.23 (4.9) μg/dL. Sixty-four and 18%25 of the children had BPb > 5 μg/dL and > 10 μg/dL, respectively. The use of lead glazed ceramics was reported in almost half of the households; it was the main BPb determinant and it was associated with an increased risk of having BPb > 5 g/dL by 2.7 times (p = 0.001). Environmental samples were within US EPA’s lead recommended limits, and blood lead levels were randomly distributed in the community. Conclusions: Lead remains a public health problem in Alpuyeca, Mexico. Unlike other local pollutants, lead exposure prevention can be achieved inexpensively and in a short term. Interventions should make mothers aware of lead’s health effects and empower them to safeguard their children’s health by avoiding the culturally ingrained use of lead glazed pottery. © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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Alpuyeca; Children; Lead sources; Lead-glazed ceramics; Mexican candy; Pb lead; lead; pollutant; bioaccumulation; blood; ceramics; child health; concentration (composition); health impact; lead; public health; Article; ceramics; child; concentration (parameters); environmental exposure; feasibility study; female; geographic distribution; household; human; lead blood level; lead poisoning; male; Mexico; public health problem; risk assessment; risk factor; school child; sediment; water analysis; adolescent; atomic absorption spectrometry; blood; cross-sectional study; environmental exposure; environmental monitoring; pollutant; questionnaire; student; Mexico [North America]; Morelos; Adolescent; Child; Cross-Sectional Studies; Environmental Exposure; Environmental Monitoring; Environmental Pollutants; Female; Humans; Lead; Male; Mexico; Spectrophotometry, Atomic; Students; Surveys and Questionnaires
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