Public health triumph’ produced very low
levels
Over there is a giant haystack with a needle
somewhere in it. But over here is a small haystack with not only one
needle, but a dozen needles in it. Which haystack do you pick to put the
effort into finding as many needles as possible? The answer is simple:
the small haystack with a dozen needles.
Unfortunately, S.1230, the lead bill
sponsored by Senator Pat Jehlen, would have Massachusetts put most of
its efforts into searching the giant haystack.
Lead poisoning is a problem characterized by
both types of haystack. For the vast, vast majority of children,
elevated lead levels occur very rarely, like a few needles in the giant
haystack. But in low-income minority neighborhoods that exist in
inner-city-type areas of any older city or town, elevated lead levels
occur more frequently, like needles in small haystacks scattered in
various locations.
S.1230 would have every property in the giant
haystack area be inspected – sometimes as often as every two years – for
lead paint, although the bill requires nothing to be done about the lead
paint once it is found. Lead paint will definitely be found in most
housing built before 1978, which is most housing in Massachusetts.
Nevertheless, almost no children will be poisoned. Meanwhile, where
children will be found poisoned – among the poor – will be ignored.
A very
rare ailment
As reported in the
Wall Street Journal (December 18,
2007, p. D1), it turns out that lead poisoning is so rare – a few
needles in a haystack – that no one wants to fund research into a
promising new medication (called d-penicillamine) to lower elevated
blood lead levels. Not drug companies. Not charities. Not even lead
advocacy groups. Sometimes patients with rare diseases or their
relatives pitch in to support research. Not even that has happened with
lead poisoning. Only one champion has devised a low cost, high risk way
to get a few investors to put up smallish sums of money motivated in
part by sheer charity. For its lack of research support, lead poisoning
is called an “orphan” ailment. That’s how rare elevated lead levels are.
It has not always been this way. In 1978,
just when lead was banned from gasoline, the median blood lead level in
U.S. children was 15 micrograms per deciliter, a level now considered
very mildly elevated. By 1999, some 13 years after lead was removed from
gasoline, this median lead level had dropped to 2 mcg/dL. This steep
drop has been called a “triumph for public health” (New England
Journal of Medicine, April 17, 2003, p. 1515).
Harm
at low levels?
The question now is whether today’s low lead
levels really cause any harm.
To put lead levels in further context, lead
poisoning with visible symptoms does not occur until lead levels climb
to the “astronomical” vicinity of 170 mcg/dL, and death does not result
until over 300 (Technology, 1999, vol 6, p.261). A child used to
be considered out of immediate danger on clinical grounds if the level
was below 100. For many years before 1970, a level of 60 was considered
“elevated” and a “level of concern” by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control (CDC).
From 1970 to 1991, the CDC steadily dropped
the level of concern. In 1970, 40 mcg/dL became a new level of concern.
In 1978, it dropped to 30, then again in 1984 to 25, then again in 1991
to 10, where it has remained ever since.
At all these lower levels, no symptoms are
visible. Doctors and scientists were forced to consider possible hidden
impacts: lowering of IQ, attention deficit disorder, speech delays,
antisocial behavior, and learning disabilities. The problem with these
symptoms is that they only show up when children reach school age
(elevated lead levels typically happen around age 2) and are often
caused by other factors. In particular, these characteristics are far
more common among lower-income minority children compared to other
children.
When researchers study the impacts of lead at
the very low levels now rarely encountered, their studies face the
difficult task of trying to eliminate all those other factors that could
cause these symptoms. For example, when an IQ loss of only 2 points or 5
points or 10 points is encountered, is it a result only of a slightly
elevated lead level? Or is it caused by any one of many other factors:
the mother’s IQ, the mother’s childrearing practices, the lack of
reading skills in the home, lack of breast-feeding, and the list goes on
and on – ? As a practical matter, researchers cannot control for all
these other “confounding” factors, as they are called.
Hence, there is a strong academic dispute
over whether or not low levels of lead cause any harm at all. The issue
has become politicized. Advocates, including some researchers, are
convinced there is harm at any level; others say there is likely no harm
at today’s really low “background” levels.
Political options
We do not need to take sides in this
scientific debate. Elevated lead levels are rare, and what needs to be
done to lower the few remaining elevated lead levels is already known
and does not require panic. It does not require lead inspections. It
does not require costly abatement where lead is scraped off of wood
surfaces in what is a highly hazardous operation itself.
It requires making sure that paint in older
homes is kept intact and is not crumbling, chalking or falling off in
small particles. It requires using vacuum cleaners and developing
cleanliness habits around the home and with children. It requires
covering up, planting grass or otherwise barricading soil that may be
contaminated. It requires running the water for a minute in the morning
before using it for cooking or drinking. It requires knowing not to sand
painted surfaces, especially with power sanders. It requires education,
targeted in particular to those poor neighborhoods where elevated lead
levels still occur more frequently.
These requirements are more than enough for a
very rare ailment that may pose no threat at today’s low levels.