Kumar A, Scott Clark C
Chemicals and Health, Toxics Link, New Delhi, India.
Indoor Air. 2009 Oct;19(5):414-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0668.2009.00605.x. Epub 2009 Jul 29.
Lead in household dust is dangerous to children who ingest lead from playing close to the ground, and having frequent hand-to-mouth contact. Although there have been several investigations of lead levels in India in air, blood and new paint, the literature is sparse on the levels of lead in household dust. This study analyzed 99 samples of dust taken from bare floors and 49 samples of dust taken from windowsills in a cross-section of Delhi, India houses for lead loadings. The arithmetic mean of lead loading for floor samples and windowsill dust samples was found to be 36.24 microg/ft(2) and 129.5 microg/ft(2), respectively. The geometric mean of dust lead loading for floor and interior windowsill samples was found to be 19.7 microg/ft(2) and 75.5 microg/ft(2), respectively. Comparing the results with US geometric mean dust lead levels from a national cross-section of US housing, which in 2000 were 1.1 microg/ft(2) and 9.4 microg/ft(2) on floors and windowsills, respectively as reported by Jacobs et al. (2002) suggests that the lead content of the dust in Delhi homes is much higher than that in the national data in the US and that the levels pose a hazard to children. Practical Implications The present study is first of its kind in this part of the world. In the context of ongoing efforts to eliminate lead from paints worldwide this research will help the scientists and policy makers in assessing the Children's exposure to lead in developing country as well. Since more than one half of the housing units tested had at least one dust lead sample exceeding US health-based standards, health care providers and public health officials need to give attention to possible lead poisoning in Delhi children. Routine blood lead screening of children should follow recommended public health practice for children at risk. Additional larger-scale studies are needed in Delhi and elsewhere to determine how representative these findings are and to attempt to delineate the sources of the high dust lead which are expected to vary depending on the location. Knowledge of the sources is needed to appropriately allocate resources. From other studies performed in India it is likely that lead-based paint is one of the sources and its continued use should be discontinued.
家庭灰尘中的铅对儿童有害,儿童在靠近地面玩耍时会摄入铅,并且经常有手与嘴接触的行为。尽管印度已经对空气、血液和新油漆中的铅含量进行了多项调查,但关于家庭灰尘中铅含量的文献却很少。本研究分析了从印度德里不同房屋的裸地板上采集的99份灰尘样本以及从窗台上采集的49份灰尘样本中的铅含量。发现地板样本和窗台灰尘样本中铅含量的算术平均值分别为36.24微克/平方英尺和129.5微克/平方英尺。地板和室内窗台样本中灰尘铅含量的几何平均值分别为19.7微克/平方英尺和75.5微克/平方英尺。将这些结果与雅各布斯等人(2002年)报告的美国全国住房横截面中灰尘铅含量的几何平均值进行比较,2000年美国地板和窗台上的几何平均值分别为1.1微克/平方英尺和9.4微克/平方英尺,这表明德里家庭灰尘中的铅含量远高于美国的全国数据,并且这些含量对儿童构成危害。实际意义本研究在世界的这一地区尚属首次。在全球正在努力消除油漆中的铅的背景下,这项研究将有助于科学家和政策制定者评估发展中国家儿童的铅暴露情况。由于超过一半的测试房屋单元至少有一个灰尘铅样本超过了美国基于健康的标准,医疗保健提供者和公共卫生官员需要关注德里儿童可能的铅中毒情况。应按照针对高危儿童的推荐公共卫生做法对儿童进行常规血铅筛查。需要在德里和其他地方进行更多大规模研究,以确定这些发现的代表性如何,并试图确定高灰尘铅含量的来源,预计这些来源会因地点而异。需要了解来源以便合理分配资源。从印度进行的其他研究来看,含铅油漆很可能是来源之一,应停止继续使用。