Abstract
The toxicity of lead has been known since antiquity, although its deleterious effects at very low levels, especially for children, have been studied and documented only in this last quarter century. This review provides a brief overlook of the history of lead poisoning, its prenatal and postnatal health effects in children, environmental sources of lead (to which poor and minority group children are disproportionately exposed), legislative and governmental initiatives up to the present, and the efforts needed now to reduce or eliminate exposure to lead and to diagnose and treat lead poisoned children more effectively—at least until preventive measures have dramatically curtailed the pervasiveness of the disease.
Published Version
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