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Linking Geological and Health Sciences to Assess Childhood Lead Poisoning from Artisanal Gold Mining in Nigeria

Authors :
Heather A. Lowers
Mary Jean Brown
Harland L. Goldstein
Ian von Lindern
William M. Benzel
Simba Tirima
Behrooz Behbod
Carrie Dooyema
Ruth E. Wolf
Casey Bartrem
Cyrus J. Berry
Antonio Neri
Monique Adams
Philip L. Hageman
Rhonda L. Driscoll
Gregory P. Meeker
Gregory L. Fernette
James T. Durant
James G. Crock
Geoffrey S. Plumlee
Suzette A. Morman
Source :
Environmental Health Perspectives
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Environmental Health Perspectives, 2013.

Abstract

Background: In 2010, Médecins Sans Frontières discovered a lead poisoning outbreak linked to artisanal gold processing in northwestern Nigeria. The outbreak has killed approximately 400 young children and affected thousands more. Objectives: Our aim was to undertake an interdisciplinary geological- and health-science assessment to clarify lead sources and exposure pathways, identify additional toxicants of concern and populations at risk, and examine potential for similar lead poisoning globally. Methods: We applied diverse analytical methods to ore samples, soil and sweep samples from villages and family compounds, and plant foodstuff samples. Results: Natural weathering of lead-rich gold ores before mining formed abundant, highly gastric-bioaccessible lead carbonates. The same fingerprint of lead minerals found in all sample types confirms that ore processing caused extreme contamination, with up to 185,000 ppm lead in soils/sweep samples and up to 145 ppm lead in plant foodstuffs. Incidental ingestion of soils via hand-to-mouth transmission and of dusts cleared from the respiratory tract is the dominant exposure pathway. Consumption of water and foodstuffs contaminated by the processing is likely lesser, but these are still significant exposure pathways. Although young children suffered the most immediate and severe consequences, results indicate that older children, adult workers, pregnant women, and breastfed infants are also at risk for lead poisoning. Mercury, arsenic, manganese, antimony, and crystalline silica exposures pose additional health threats. Conclusions: Results inform ongoing efforts in Nigeria to assess lead contamination and poisoning, treat victims, mitigate exposures, and remediate contamination. Ore deposit geology, pre-mining weathering, and burgeoning artisanal mining may combine to cause similar lead poisoning disasters elsewhere globally.

Details

ISSN :
15529924 and 00916765
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Health Perspectives
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....474fac3e2ba1a82b5abb3f0a0f994a10
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1206051