Study: Tijuana children show high levels of lead in blood
Nearly 11 percent of children in Tijuana have high levels of lead in their
blood, mostly because they eat from cookware containing the toxic metal and
live near polluted soil, according to a new study.
Lead poisoning can affect brain activity and motor skills in humans and can
cause permanent damage to the central nervous system in children.
The three-year investigation by the University of California, Irvine,
tested 1,719 children ranging in age from 18 months to 7 years in and around Tijuana.
The study concluded that about 37,000 children, out of a population of
344,000, probably have unhealthful levels of lead in their blood.
About 0.1 percent of those children suffer from critical levels of lead
that require medical intervention and treatment.
The rest can be helped simply by removing lead sources from their
environment, the study said.
"The good news is that 89 percent of the population (in Tijuana) is below
the threshold level for lead poisoning", said
Jonathon Ericson, an environmental scientist at UC Irvine, who helped lead
the project.
The $600,000 study was funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
and the Centers for Disease Control,
with contributions from the city of Tijuana and the state of Baja
California.
As part of the project, researchers started a lead laboratory and clinic at
Tijuana General Hospital, and helped
counsel parents about reducing lead contamination in households.
Simply by replacing dangerous cookware, most of the affected children
showed reduced levels of lead, according to
the study, which included follow-up testing.
The EPA sponsored the research in Tijuana because nearly 30 percent of the
children living in Tijuana eventually
relocate to the United States.
The mean lead level in the blood of Tijuana's children is about twice that
of children in the United States, but lower
than in other parts of Mexico,
Similar testing in Mexico City previously found that 27 percent of children
there had unhealthful levels of lead in their
bloodstreams.