Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards Directorate, UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), Chilton, Oxon, UK.
Statistics, Modelling and Economics Department, National Infection Service, UKHSA, London, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Nov 9;22(1):2052. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-14350-y.
Exposure to lead can harm a child's health, including damage to the nervous system, delayed growth, hearing loss, and many other adverse health effects, as well as implications for social, economic, educational and social well-being. Lead exposure in children is still a concern and cases require public health management to find the exposure source and interrupt the exposure pathway. Housing characteristics can indicate the presence of lead-contaminated paint and leaded water supply pipes. We aimed to explore the relationship between housing characteristics and elevated blood lead concentration (BLC) in children in England.
We used a retrospective cohort design and included all cases of lead exposure in children reported to the UK Health Security Agency between 2014 and 2020 via surveillance. A case was a child aged under 16 years, resident in England, BLC of ≥ 0.48 μmol/L (10 µg/dL) and referred for public health management. We collected case demographic details and housing characteristics (age and type). We explored associations between elevated BLC and risk factors, using generalised linear mixed effects models and compared cases' housing type to that expected nationally.
Two hundred and sixty-six out of 290 cases met the case definition. There was no difference in BLCs between genders, age groups, deprivation, and housing type. After adjusting for reporting source, housing age and type, cases residing in housing built pre-1976 had a BLC of 0.32 (95%CI 0.02, 0.63) µmols/L (6.63 (95%CI 0.42, 13.0) µg/dL) higher than cases living in housing built after this time. Cases were 1.68 times more likely to be living in terraced housing (housing adjoined to one another) than other children and less likely to live in apartments and detached properties.
This study suggests an association between housing characteristics and BLC in children. Housing age and type may act as a proxy for lead exposure risk through exposure to leaded paint, lead water pipes, and lead contaminated dust from indoor and outdoor sources. Public health action should consider targeting families more at risk in older housing by raising awareness of the potential presence of lead pipes and paint. Interventions should include working with wider stakeholders including other housing and environmental professionals, the private sector, as well as parents and carers.
接触铅会损害儿童健康,包括神经系统损伤、生长迟缓、听力损失以及许多其他不良健康影响,以及对社会、经济、教育和社会福利的影响。儿童铅暴露仍然是一个关注点,需要公共卫生管理来寻找暴露源并阻断暴露途径。住房特征可以表明存在含铅油漆和含铅供水管道。我们旨在探索英格兰儿童住房特征与血铅浓度升高(BLC)之间的关系。
我们使用回顾性队列设计,纳入了 2014 年至 2020 年期间通过监测向英国卫生安全局报告的所有儿童铅暴露病例。病例为年龄在 16 岁以下、居住在英格兰、BLC≥0.48μmol/L(10μg/dL)且接受公共卫生管理的儿童。我们收集了病例的人口统计学细节和住房特征(年龄和类型)。我们使用广义线性混合效应模型探索了 BLC 升高与危险因素之间的关联,并将病例的住房类型与全国预期的住房类型进行了比较。
290 例病例中有 266 例符合病例定义。BLC 在性别、年龄组、贫困程度和住房类型之间无差异。在调整报告来源、住房年龄和类型后,居住在 1976 年前建造的住房中的病例 BLC 比居住在该时间后建造的住房中的病例高 0.32(95%CI 0.02, 0.63)µmol/L(6.63(95%CI 0.42, 13.0)µg/dL)。病例居住在排屋(彼此相邻的房屋)中的可能性是其他儿童的 1.68 倍,而居住在公寓和独立式住宅中的可能性较小。
本研究表明,儿童住房特征与 BLC 之间存在关联。住房年龄和类型可能通过暴露于含铅油漆、含铅水管以及室内和室外来源的含铅灰尘,成为铅暴露风险的一个指标。公共卫生行动应考虑通过提高对潜在含铅管道和油漆存在的认识,针对风险较高的老旧住房中的家庭采取行动。干预措施应包括与更广泛的利益相关者合作,包括其他住房和环境专业人员、私营部门以及父母和照顾者。