[Oe List ...] Thanks to colleague Dr Bruce Lanphear: new CDC recommendation
RICHARD HOWIE
rhowie3 at verizon.net
Sat Jan 28 08:36:28 EST 2012
Ah, JOY! The work of the fathers and mothers can be helpful to
generations to come.
Grace and Peace, Ellen
On Jan 26, 2012, at 6:11 PM, Ellie Stock wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> In 2000 I became part of a presbytery PC(USA) partnership with Peru
> related to hunger issues. One focus was addressing lead and other
> heavy metal contamination in La Oroya, Peru and also here in the St
> Louis region (Herculaneum) caused by the same US-owned company.
> From time to time the partnership has been helped by the research
> of colleague Dr. Bruce Lanphear who specializes in lead and other
> toxins as they relate to health issues, particularly related to
> children.
>
> I wanted to share a bit of good news I received yesterday in an
> email from Perry Gottesfeld (OK International) who is a member of a
> scientific advisory panel to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
> (CDC) that has made a formal recommendaton on childhood lead
> poisoning prevention that changes a policy that has been in effect
> in the U.S. since 1991 and is commonly used in other countries
> based on the same World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation
> and cut-off. Previously, World Health Organization and EPA and CDC
> and other groups used the standard that only a blood lead level
> over 10 ug/dl was a "level of concern." Most medical laboratories
> around the world have adopted this level as the "normal" or
> "acceptable" cut-off listed on blood test reports going to
> physicians and hospitals. The new recommendations eliminate the
> use of the term "level of concern" and acknowledge that based on a
> comprehensive review of the scientific literature, there is no
> known safe level of exposure to children. The new guidance calls
> for specific response actions for children with blood lead levels
> in the upper 2.5% of the population feometric mean (currently 5 ub/
> dl in the U.S.) These lower levels currently impact approximately
> 450,000 children in the U.S. but millions more in developing
> countries. [Many children in La Oroya, Peru have blood lead levels
> as high as 30-60 ug/dl and would be hospitalized if they lived in
> the U.S.]
>
> As early as 2001 (and probably earlier) colleague Dr. Bruce
> Lanphear (formerly at Children's Hospital in Cincinnati and now a
> professor in Vancouver) was writing that there were "no safe blood
> lead levels and that blood lead levels as low as 1 ug/dl were
> harmful, especially for children and pregnant women. The results
> of tests indicating this were published in 2003 in the New England
> Journal of Medicine. Bruce has been on many advisory boards
> related to toxins and health. His work (along with a few other
> prophets in the wilderness) contributed to this latest CDC
> recommendation (despite years of opposition by government agencies
> and contaminating corporate entities).
>
> Lead contamination continues to be a major environmental issue not
> only in the US (lead paint, lead smeltering) but also in developing
> countries (where lead is mined and smelted, where leaded gasoline
> is still the norm) and growing industrial nations (like China,
> where many of our lead batteries for computers, cars, toys, etc.
> are produced). Standards such as this not only help to improve
> the health of people in the US but also act as leverage for global
> health standards.
>
> So, thank you to you Bruce and your colleagues for your past work
> and continuing work which has had a much broader impact. Its a joy
> to see such research translate into policy.
>
> Aren't you proud, Nancy?
>
> Ellie Stock
> elliestock at aol.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
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