Abstract

Mount Isa, Queensland, is one of three Australian cities with significant lead emissions due to nonferrous mining and smelting. Unlike the two other cities with lead mines or smelters, Mount Isa currently has no system of annual, systematic, community-wide blood lead level testing; and testing rates among Indigenous children are low. In previous screenings, this group of children has been shown to have higher average blood lead levels than non-Indigenous children. The first aim of this study was to assess whether parents and children would participate in less invasive, rapid point-of-care capillary testing. The second aim was to measure blood lead levels among a range of children that roughly reflected the percentage of the Indigenous/non-Indigenous population. This pilot study is based on a convenience sample of children between the ages of 12 and 83 months who were recruited to participate by staff at a Children and Family Centre. Over three half-days, 30 children were tested using capillary blood samples and the LeadCare II Point-of-Care testing system. Rapid point-of-care capillary testing was well tolerated by the children. Of 30 children tested, 40% (n = 12) had blood lead levels ≥5 µg/dL and 10% had levels ≥10 µg/dL. The highest blood lead level measured was 17.3 µg/dL. The percentage of children with blood lead levels ≥5 µg/dL was higher among Indigenous children compared to non-Indigenous (64.2% compared to 18.8%) as was the geometric mean level (6.5 (95% CI, 4.7, 9.2) versus 2.4 (95% CI, 1.8, 3.1)), a statistically significant difference. Though based on a small convenience sample, this study identified 12 children (40%) of the sample with blood lead levels ≥5 µg/dL. Due to historical and ongoing heavy metal emissions from mining and smelting in Mount Isa, we recommend a multi-component program of universal blood lead level testing, culturally appropriate follow-up and intervention for children who are identified with blood lead levels ≥5 µg/dL. We further recommend focused outreach and assistance to the Indigenous community, and further control of emissions and remediation of existing environmental lead contamination in children’s play and residential areas.

Highlights

  • The city of Mount Isa is the most important industrial, commercial, and administrative centre in outback Queensland

  • The funding is part of a five-year $13 million NSW government commitment to addressing environmental lead exposure in Broken Hill [55]. This pilot study found that 40% of the children tested had blood lead levels ≥5 μg/dL

  • The proportion with blood lead levels ≥5 μg/dL was higher among Indigenous children as was the geometric mean blood lead level of these children

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Summary

Introduction

The city of Mount Isa is the most important industrial, commercial, and administrative centre in outback Queensland. Founded nearly a century ago on land belonging to the Kalkadoon Aboriginal tribe, the large inland city’s economy depends on the employment and industry that exists around the lead and copper smelter, as well as several mines from which the ore that feeds the smelters is extracted. The city developed in proximity to the smelters and mines (see Figure 1). According to the National Pollution Inventory, the Mount Isa Mines emitted 81,000 kg of lead in 2013/2014 [1] and. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 1567; doi:10.3390/ijerph14121567 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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