4.7 Article

Exposure of US Children to Residential Dust Lead, 1999-2004: I. Housing and Demographic Factors

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
Volume 117, Issue 3, Pages 461-467

Publisher

US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.11917

Keywords

dust lead; housing; lead; National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; NHANES

Funding

  1. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development [C-PHI-00931]

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BACKGROUND: Lead-contaminated house dust is a major source of lead exposure for children in the United States. In 1999-2004, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NI-LANES) collected dust lead (PbD) loading samples from the homes of children 12-60 months of age. OBJECTIVES: In this study, we aimed to compare national PbD levels with existing health-based standards and to identify housing and demographic factors associated with floor and windowsill PbD. METHODS: We used NHANES PbD data (n = 2,065 from floors and n = 1,618 from windowsills) and covariates to construct linear and logistic regression models. RESULTS: The population-weighted geometric mean floor and windowsill PbD were 0.5 mu g/ft(2) [geometric standard error (GSE) = 1.0] and 7.6 mu g/ft(2) (GSE = 1.0), respectively. Only 0.16% of the floors and 4.0% of the sills had PbD at or above current federal standards of 40 and 250 mu g/ft(2), respectively. Income, race/ethnicity, floor surface/condition, windowsill PbD, year of construction, recent renovation, smoking, and survey year were significant predictors of floor PbD [the proportion of variability in the dependent variable accounted for by the model (R-2) = 35%]. A similar set of predictors plus the presence of large areas of exterior deteriorated paint in pre-1950 homes and the presence of interior deteriorated paint explained 20% of the variability in sill PbD. A companion article [Dixon et al. Environ Health Perspect 117:468-474 (2009)] describes the relationship between children's blood lead and PbD. CONCLUSION: Most houses with children have PbD levels that comply with federal standards but may put children at risk. Factors associated with PbD in our population-based models are primarily the same as factors identified in smaller at-risk cohorts. PbD on floors and windowsills should be kept as low as possible to protect children.

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