4.6 Article

Objectively measured external building quality, Census housing vacancies and age, and serum metals in an adult cohort in Detroit, Michigan

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41370-022-00447-4

Keywords

Lead; Housing vacancies; Urban blight; Building quality

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Vacant, aged, and poorly maintained housing may contribute to low-level lead exposure among adults in older cities like Detroit. US Census and neighborhood quality data can be used to identify population-level lead exposure among US adults.
Background Residentially derived lead pollution remains a significant problem in urban areas across the country and globe. The risks of childhood residence in housing contaminated with lead-based paint are well-established, but less is known about the effects of housing quality on adult lead exposure. Objective To evaluate the effects of residential-area housing age, vacancy status, and building quality on adult lead exposures. Methods We evaluated the effect of Census block group housing vacancy proportion, block group housing age, and in-person survey evaluated neighborhood building quality on serum levels of lead, mercury, manganese, and copper among a representative cohort of adults in Detroit, Michigan, from 2008-2013 using generalized estimating equations. Results Participants in Census block groups with higher proportions of vacant and aged housing had non-significantly elevated serum lead levels. We identified similar positive associations between residence in neighborhoods with poorer objectively measured building quality and serum lead. Associations between Census vacancies, housing age, objectively measured building quality, and serum lead were stronger among participants with a more stable residential history. Significance Vacant, aged, and poorly maintained housing may contribute to widespread, low-level lead exposure among adult residents of older cities like Detroit, Michigan. US Census and neighborhood quality data may be a useful tool to identify population-level lead exposures among US adults. Impact Using longitudinal data from a representative cohort of adults in Detroit, Michigan, we demonstrate that Census data regarding housing vacancies and age and neighborhood survey data regarding housing quality are associated with increasing serum lead levels. Previous research has primarily focused on housing quality and lead exposures among children. Here, we demonstrate that area-level metrics of housing quality are associated with lead exposures among adults.

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