University of Massachusetts Amherst, School of Public Health and Health Sciences, Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Amherst, MA, USA.
South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, Bureau of Health Improvement and Equity, Columbia, SC, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Dec 1;694:133783. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133783. Epub 2019 Aug 6.
Many studies of children's exposure to lead (Pb) are carried out in urban and industrialized environments. This study analyzed blood lead level (BLL) data collected from 2011 to 2016 from approximately 140,000 children ages <1 to 6 years across South Carolina (SC), including urban and rural areas. Individual-level characteristics included children's age, and race/ethnicity. Block group variables examined included population by race and ethnicity, households below the poverty level, median year homes built, urban/rural classification, and percent road coverage. BLL were higher in urban compared to rural children but increased to a greater extent in rural children from age < 1 year to 2 years. Road coverage was strongly associated with higher BLL in urban areas, and with home age more weakly, but neither road coverage nor home age was associated with BLL in rural areas. Young urban children may receive greater exposure to Pb from house dust and outdoor legacy Pb contamination, and young rural children through diet and drinking water. Black children had higher BLL in urban areas than white children, and the converse was true in rural areas. Population data indicated that rural areas had more poverty than urban areas, but strong associations between increased children's BLL and either ethnicity or socio-economic status (SES) at the block group level was not observed, likely due to distinct characteristics of poverty and geographic distribution by ethnicity in urban as compared to rural areas of SC. Individual demographics and environmental characteristics may be more closely associated with BLL than geographically aggregated SES and race/ethnicity characteristics. Interventions to reduce children's exposure to Pb should occur at as early an age as possible, and differences between rural and urban areas should be considered as interventions are developed to reduce children's BLL.
许多研究都针对儿童接触铅(Pb)的情况在城市和工业化环境中进行。本研究分析了南卡罗来纳州(SC)大约 140,000 名年龄在 1 至 6 岁之间的儿童在 2011 年至 2016 年期间采集的血铅水平(BLL)数据,包括城市和农村地区。个体特征包括儿童的年龄和种族/民族。所检查的块组变量包括按种族和民族划分的人口、贫困线以下的家庭、中位数房屋建造年份、城乡分类以及道路覆盖率。城市儿童的 BLL 高于农村儿童,但从 1 岁以下到 2 岁,农村儿童的 BLL 增加幅度更大。道路覆盖率与城市地区较高的 BLL 密切相关,与房屋年龄的关系较弱,但道路覆盖率和房屋年龄都与农村地区的 BLL 无关。城市的幼儿可能会从室内灰尘和户外遗留的铅污染中接触到更多的铅,而农村的幼儿则可能通过饮食和饮用水接触到铅。城市地区的黑人儿童的 BLL 高于白人儿童,而在农村地区则相反。人口数据表明,农村地区比城市地区贫困,但在块组级别上,儿童 BLL 与种族或社会经济地位(SES)之间并未观察到强烈的关联,这可能是由于南卡罗来纳州城市和农村地区的贫困特征和族裔地理分布的不同所致。个体人口统计学和环境特征与 BLL 的关联可能比地理上聚合的 SES 和种族/民族特征更为密切。减少儿童铅暴露的干预措施应尽早进行,并且在制定降低儿童 BLL 的干预措施时应考虑农村和城市地区之间的差异。