Landrigan Philip J, Schechter Clyde B, Lipton Jeffrey M, Fahs Marianne C, Schwartz Joel
The Center for Children's Health and the Environment and The Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2002 Jul;110(7):721-8. doi: 10.1289/ehp.02110721.
In this study, we aimed to estimate the contribution of environmental pollutants to the incidence, prevalence, mortality, and costs of pediatric disease in American children. We examined four categories of illness: lead poisoning, asthma, cancer, and neurobehavioral disorders. To estimate the proportion of each attributable to toxins in the environment, we used an environmentally attributable fraction (EAF) model. EAFs for lead poisoning, asthma, and cancer were developed by panels of experts through a Delphi process, whereas that for neurobehavioral disorders was based on data from the National Academy of Sciences. We define environmental pollutants as toxic chemicals of human origin in air, food, water, and communities. To develop estimates of costs, we relied on data from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Health Care Financing Agency, and the Practice Management Information Corporation. EAFs were judged to be 100% for lead poisoning, 30% for asthma (range, 10-35%), 5% for cancer (range, 2-10%), and 10% for neurobehavioral disorders (range, 5-20%). Total annual costs are estimated to be $54.9 billion (range $48.8-64.8 billion): $43.4 billion for lead poisoning, $2.0 billion for asthma, $0.3 billion for childhood cancer, and $9.2 billion for neurobehavioral disorders. This sum amounts to 2.8 percent of total U.S. health care costs. This estimate is likely low because it considers only four categories of illness, incorporates conservative assumptions, ignores costs of pain and suffering, and does not include late complications for which etiologic associations are poorly quantified. The costs of pediatric environmental disease are high, in contrast with the limited resources directed to research, tracking, and prevention.
在本研究中,我们旨在评估环境污染物对美国儿童儿科疾病的发病率、患病率、死亡率及成本的影响。我们研究了四类疾病:铅中毒、哮喘、癌症和神经行为障碍。为估算每类疾病中可归因于环境毒素的比例,我们使用了环境归因分数(EAF)模型。铅中毒、哮喘和癌症的EAF由专家小组通过德尔菲法得出,而神经行为障碍的EAF则基于美国国家科学院的数据。我们将环境污染物定义为空气、食物、水和社区中人为来源的有毒化学物质。为估算成本,我们依赖于美国环境保护局、疾病控制与预防中心、国家卫生统计中心、劳工统计局、医疗保健融资机构及实践管理信息公司的数据。铅中毒的EAF被判定为100%,哮喘为30%(范围为10 - 35%),癌症为5%(范围为2 - 10%),神经行为障碍为10%(范围为5 - 20%)。估计每年总费用为549亿美元(范围为488亿 - 648亿美元):铅中毒434亿美元,哮喘20亿美元,儿童癌症3亿美元,神经行为障碍92亿美元。这笔费用占美国医疗保健总费用的2.8%。这一估计可能偏低,因为它仅考虑了四类疾病,采用了保守的假设,忽略了痛苦和折磨的成本,并且未包括病因关联难以量化的晚期并发症。与用于研究、追踪和预防的有限资源相比,儿科环境疾病的成本很高。