Abstract

Lead poisoning is often seen as a problem of the past. While acute cases are now rare, there is no known safe level of lead for children and blood lead levels at and below 5 μg/dL are associated with neurological deficits. Previous work has established that risk factors for lead exposure include race/ethnicity, poverty, Medicaid enrollment, housing built before 1950, and age. Efficient blood lead screening is crucial in the greater Atlanta area as pockets of poverty and old housing put some children at particularly high risk for chronic exposure to low levels of lead. Here, 20 years of data on children’s blood lead levels in Georgia were used to create maps to assess the spatial distribution of blood lead screening and blood lead levels in the Atlanta area. ZIP code tabulation area (ZCTA)-level screening rates continue to be associated with relative poverty but not with housing age, a well-established risk factor for lead exposure. Building on previous research, a priority screening index based on poverty and housing age was also created to identify specific high-risk census tracts for screening within Atlanta ZCTAs. This index shows a total of 18 highest-priority census tracts in the greater Atlanta area. Together, these 18 tracts contain 2715 children under six years old, 1.7% of all children under six years old in the entire greater Atlanta area.

Highlights

  • Lead poisoning is often seen as a problem of the past

  • In 2012 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) moved away from a “level of concern” in favor of a “reference value” based on the 97.5th percentile blood lead levels (BLLs) in children between 1–5 y­ ears[6]. This blood lead reference value was calculated as 5 μg/dL based on National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data from 2007 to 2­ 01010

  • The maximum percentage of children screened in a ZIP code tabulation area (ZCTA) was 53% for 0–12 month-old children (ZCTA 30329 in 2010) and 56% for 12–24 month-old children (ZCTA 30315 in the year 2000)

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Summary

Introduction

Lead poisoning is often seen as a problem of the past. While acute cases are rare, there is no known safe level of lead for children and blood lead levels at and below 5 μg/dL are associated with neurological deficits. High (60 to 300 μg/dL) blood lead levels (BLLs) are associated with severe neurologic outcomes like peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy with symptoms that include ataxia, convulsions, coma, and d­ eath[1,2]. Such severe cases are rare in the United States (US) due to federal regulations that reduced lead in paint, solder, gasoline, and other common exposure ­sources[3,4,5]. While all homes built before 1978 have an increased risk for lead exposure, houses built before 1950 pose the greatest danger as they are more likely

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