Abstract

Environmental conditions that contribute to childhood lead exposure are spatially patterned. Socioeconomic and racial inequities in childhood lead exposure have been well documented, however childhood lead exposure in Milwaukee is understudied. As a segregated rustbelt metropolitan area with childhood lead exposure concerns, Milwaukee is uniquely positioned to evaluate the synergistic effects of racial and economic drivers of childhood lead exposure. Using surveillance data from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, Division of Public Health and the US Census Bureau, this cross-sectional study determined the intersectional effect of poverty, home ownership, and racial/ethnic composition on childhood lead exposure in Milwaukee County neighborhoods using linear regression adjusting for average census tract housing age and number of children. The final analytical sample consisted of 48,393 individual childhood blood lead levels aggregated to 215 Milwaukee County census tracts. Census tracts with mean childhood blood lead levels greater than or equal to 5 μg/dL were predominantly low home ownership, high poverty, and majority non-White census tracts. The effects of low home ownership, high poverty, and majority non-White census tracts were synergistic, producing 1.78 (95% CI: 1.44, 2.11) μg/dL higher mean childhood blood lead level than high home ownership, low poverty, and majority White census tracts (referent). This research reveals that social determinants at the neighborhood level co-occur and interact to produce inequities in childhood lead exposure. Lead prevention efforts should align with equity-focused housing and economic policies that target primary prevention in neighborhoods disproportionately burdened by childhood lead exposure.

Highlights

  • MethodsIndividual blood lead level surveillance data for children six years old or younger residing in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin were obtained from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, Division of Public Health for 2014–2016 (N = 57,268)

  • “Elevated” Census tracts with mean childhood blood lead level 5μg/dL

  • “Not Elevated” Census tracts with mean childhood blood lead level < 5μg/dL

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Summary

Methods

Individual blood lead level surveillance data for children six years old or younger residing in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin were obtained from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, Division of Public Health for 2014–2016 (N = 57,268). Individual blood lead levels were aggregated to generate Milwaukee County census tract mean childhood blood lead levels (N = 296). Census tract mean childhood blood lead level data was merged with socioeconomic and demographic data obtained from the US Census Bureau using census tracts. Census tracts with no socioeconomic or demographic data available were subsequently dropped from the analysis, resulting in 48,393 individual blood lead levels aggregated to the final census tractlevel analytical sample of 215. The average number of individual childhood blood lead observations contributing to census tract-level means was 225; the minimum number of individual childhood blood lead observations contributing to a census tract-level mean was six. This study was approved by the University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee Institutional Review Board

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