Abstract

This study appraises New Orleans soil lead and children’s lead exposure before and ten years after Hurricane Katrina flooded the city. Introduction: Early childhood exposure to lead is associated with lifelong and multiple health, learning, and behavioral disorders. Lead exposure is an important factor hindering the long-term resilience and sustainability of communities. Lead exposure disproportionately affects low socioeconomic status of communities. No safe lead exposure is known and the common intervention is not effective. An essential responsibility of health practitioners is to develop an effective primary intervention. Methods: Pre- and post-Hurricane soil lead and children’s blood lead data were matched by census tract communities. Soil lead and blood lead data were described, mapped, blood lead graphed as a function of soil lead, and Multi-Response Permutation Procedures statistics established disparities. Results: Simultaneous decreases occurred in soil lead accompanied by an especially large decline in children’s blood lead 10 years after Hurricane Katrina. Exposure disparities still exist between children living in the interior and outer areas of the city. Conclusions: At the scale of a city, this study demonstrates that decreasing soil lead effectively reduces children’s blood lead. Primary prevention of lead exposure can be accomplished by reducing soil lead in the urban environment.

Highlights

  • At the scale of a city, this study demonstrates that decreasing soil lead effectively reduces children’s blood lead

  • Primary prevention of lead exposure can be accomplished by reducing soil lead in the urban environment

  • Lead is included in the dynamic inputs, storages, transformations, and outputs that form part of the interconnected processes by fashioning, via environmental signaling, the urban life-support environment, i.e., exposome [1,2]

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Summary

Conclusions

Soil lead in New Orleans declined sharply after Hurricane Katrina. The soil lead reductions were accompanied by simultaneous and larger decreases in children’s blood lead. This finding underscores the concept that soil is a major reservoir for lead dust and an exposure source to children. This information provides an intervention method; by reducing surface soil lead at the community scale to protect childhood populations from lead exposure, it is possible to diminish environmental health disparities, and to enact primary lead prevention

Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Change in Children’s Blood Lead
Figures and
Soil lead and blood leadchanges changes
Map of
Map of Pre- and Post-Katrina Changes of Soil Lead and Blood Lead
Discussion
Inputs of Lead and Other Toxic Substances into the Environment
Lessons from Hurricane Katrina and the New Orleans Soil Environment
Full Text
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