Wengrovitz Anne M, Brown Mary J
Division of Environmental and Emergency Health Services, National Center for Environmental Health, CDC, 4770 Buford Highway, MS F-40, Atlanta, GA 30341, USA.
MMWR Recomm Rep. 2009 Aug 7;58(RR-9):1-11.
Lead is a potent, pervasive neurotoxicant, and elevated blood lead levels (EBLLs) can result in decreased IQ, academic failure, and behavioral problems in children. Eliminating EBLLs among children is one of the 2010 U.S. national health objectives. Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) indicate substantial decreases both in the percentage of persons in the United States with EBLLs and in mean BLLs among all age and ethnic groups, including children aged 1--5 years. Historically, children in low-income families served by public assistance programs have been considered to be at greater risk for EBLLs than other children. However, evidence indicates that children in low-income families are experiencing decreases in BLLs, suggesting that the EBLL disparity between Medicaid-eligible children and non--Medicaid-eligible children is diminishing. In response to these findings, the CDC Advisory Committee on Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention is updating recommendations for blood lead screening among children eligible for Medicaid by providing recommendations for improving BLL screening and information for health-care providers, state officials, and others interested in lead-related services for Medicaid-eligible children. Because state and local officials are more familiar than federal agencies with local risk for EBLLs, CDC recommends that these officials have the flexibility to develop blood lead screening strategies that reflect local risk for EBLLs. Rather than provide universal screening to all Medicaid children, which was previously recommended, state and local officials should target screening toward specific groups of children in their area at higher risk for EBLLs. This report presents the updated CDC recommendations and provides strategies to 1) improve screening rates of children at risk for EBLLs, 2) develop surveillance strategies that are not solely dependent on BLL testing, and 3) assist states with evaluation of screening plans.
铅是一种强效、广泛存在的神经毒素,儿童血铅水平升高(EBLLs)会导致智商下降、学业成绩不佳和行为问题。消除儿童的EBLLs是2010年美国国家卫生目标之一。美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)的数据表明,美国EBLLs人群的百分比以及所有年龄和种族群体(包括1 - 5岁儿童)的平均血铅水平(BLLs)均大幅下降。从历史上看,由公共援助项目服务的低收入家庭儿童被认为比其他儿童面临更高的EBLLs风险。然而,有证据表明低收入家庭儿童的BLLs正在下降,这表明符合医疗补助条件的儿童与不符合医疗补助条件的儿童之间的EBLLs差距正在缩小。针对这些发现,美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)儿童铅中毒预防咨询委员会正在更新针对符合医疗补助条件儿童的血铅筛查建议,为改善BLLs筛查提供建议,并为医疗保健提供者、州官员以及其他对符合医疗补助条件儿童的铅相关服务感兴趣的人员提供信息。由于州和地方官员比联邦机构更熟悉当地的EBLLs风险,CDC建议这些官员有灵活性制定反映当地EBLLs风险的血铅筛查策略。州和地方官员不应像之前建议的那样对所有符合医疗补助条件的儿童进行普遍筛查,而应针对其所在地区EBLLs风险较高的特定儿童群体进行筛查。本报告介绍了CDC的更新建议,并提供了以下策略:1)提高EBLLs风险儿童的筛查率;2)制定不完全依赖BLL检测的监测策略;3)协助各州评估筛查计划。