Intelligence gain and social cost savings attributable to environmental lead exposure reduction strategies since the year 2000 in Flanders, Belgium

Background: Recent lead (Pb) exposure reduction strategies enabled to lower children's blood lead levels (B-Pb) worldwide. This study reports the estimated intelligence gain and social cost savings attributable to recent exposure reduction based on reported B-Pb levels observed in adolescents sampled within the framework of the Flemish Environment and Health Studies (FLEHS, Belgium), i.e. in 2003-2004 (FLEHSI), in 2008-2009 (FLEHSII), and in 2013-2014 (FLEHSIII). Methods: Intelligence Quotient (IQ) loss per 100,000 individuals- A ttributable to B-Pb above 20 μg/L-was estimated based on widely... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Remy, Sylvie
Hambach, Ramona
Van Sprundel, Marc
Teughels, Caroline
Nawrot, Tim S.
Buekers, Jurgen
Cornelis, Christa
Bruckers, Liesbeth
Schoeters, Greet
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Reihe/Periodikum: Remy , S , Hambach , R , Van Sprundel , M , Teughels , C , Nawrot , T S , Buekers , J , Cornelis , C , Bruckers , L & Schoeters , G 2019 , ' Intelligence gain and social cost savings attributable to environmental lead exposure reduction strategies since the year 2000 in Flanders, Belgium ' , Environmental Health , vol. 18 , 113 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12940-019-0548-5
Schlagwörter: Chemical exposure prevention / HBM / Human biomonitoring / Intelligence and economic gain / Lead exposure
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26987889
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/da/publications/d0336f61-4ccf-4650-845b-31a49ed21532

Background: Recent lead (Pb) exposure reduction strategies enabled to lower children's blood lead levels (B-Pb) worldwide. This study reports the estimated intelligence gain and social cost savings attributable to recent exposure reduction based on reported B-Pb levels observed in adolescents sampled within the framework of the Flemish Environment and Health Studies (FLEHS, Belgium), i.e. in 2003-2004 (FLEHSI), in 2008-2009 (FLEHSII), and in 2013-2014 (FLEHSIII). Methods: Intelligence Quotient (IQ) loss per 100,000 individuals- A ttributable to B-Pb above 20 μg/L-was estimated based on widely accepted dose response functions between children's B-Pb and IQ (-1.88 IQ points for a duplication in B-Pb from 20 μg/L onwards; 95% Confidence Interval (CI):-1.16;-2.59) and B-Pb exposure distribution parameters of FLEHS studies. The results were translated to the Flemish population of 15-year-olds. Given a 3-year time gap between subsequent sampling periods, the exposure distribution of each study was assumed 3 years prior to the study as well. Economic impact was estimated based on expected decrease in lifetime earnings (19,464 per decreasing IQ point in 2018). Results: The percentage of the adolescent population exceeding a B-Pb of 20 μg/L decreased from 57% (FLEHSI) to 23% (FLEHSII), and even further to 2.5% (FLEHSIII). The estimated IQ loss per 100,000 individuals was 94,280 (95% CI: 58,427-130,138) in FLEHSI, 14,993 (95% CI: 9289-20,695) in FLEHSII, and 976 (95% CI: 604-1347) in FLEHSIII. This translates into a total loss of 378,962 (95%CI: 234,840-523,091) IQ points within the Flemish population of 15-year-olds between 2000 and 2014. Assuming that current exposure levels do not reincrease, the expected IQ loss during the subsequent period of 15 years is estimated to be maximally 10,275 (95%CI: 6363-14,182) points. Conclusions: 7176 (95%CI: 4447-9905) million of social cost savings were achieved by Pb reduction strategies in Flanders over 15 years. If current exposure levels further reduce to B-Pb below 20 μg/L for ...