NEWS REPORT: Lead dust is linked to violence
NEWS RELEASE FROM TULANE UNIVERSITY
April 17, 2012
Childhood exposure to lead dust has been linked to lasting physical and behavioral effects, and now lead dust from vehicles using leaded gasoline has been linked to instances of aggravated assault two decades after exposure, says Tulane toxicologist Howard W. Mielke.
Vehicles using leaded gasoline that contaminated cities’ air decades ago have increased aggravated assault in urban areas, researchers say.
The new findings are published in the journal Environment International by Mielke, a research professor in the Department of Pharmacology at the Tulane University School of Medicine, and demographer Sammy Zahran at the Center for Disaster and Risk Analysis at Colorado State University.
The researchers compared the amount of lead released in six cities: Atlanta, Chicago, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, New Orleans and San Diego, during the years 1950–1985. This period saw an increase in airborne lead dust exposure due
to the use of leaded gasoline. There were correlating spikes in the rates of aggravated assault approximately two decades later, after the exposed children grew up.
After controlling for other possible causes such as community and household income, education, policing effort and incarceration rates, Mielke and Zahran found that for every one percent increase in tonnages of environmental lead released 22 years earlier, the present rate of aggravated assault was raised by 0.46 percent.
“Children are extremely sensitive to lead dust, and lead exposure has latent neuroanatomical effects that severely impact future societal behavior and welfare,†says Mielke. “Up to 90 per cent of the variation in aggravated assault across the cities is explained by the amount of lead dust released 22 years earlier.â€
Tons of lead dust were released between 1950 and 1985 in urban areas by vehicles using leaded gasoline, and improper handling of lead-based paint also has contributed to contamination.
“Robust programs to reduce lead exposure of children in the present will have health and social benefits decades into the future, including reduced crime,†the researchers say.
For more information:
Arthur Nead
Phone: 504-247-1443
LEAD POISONING, BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS AND VIOLENCE – Minneapolis Department of Health and Family Support 2008
HOWARD MILEKE TESTIFIED HERE IN FRISCO DURING THE TCEQ PUBLIC HEARINGS LAST SUMMER that the plan the TCEQ was proposing for Exide failed to protect Frisco children and the community.
If you are concerned about the many dangers of lead dust and want to know more about it and how to protect your family, you will want to check out BUST LEAD DUST now! Dr. Mileke serves on this organization’s advisory board.