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The relationship between early childhood blood lead levels and performance on end-of-grade tests

Authors :
Miranda, Marie Lynn
Kim, Dohyeong
Overstreet Galeano, M. Alicia
Paul, Christopher J.
Hull, Andrew P. Morgan, S. Philip
Source :
Environmental Health Perspectives. August, 2007, Vol. 115 Issue 8, p1242, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Childhood lead poisoning remains a critical environmental health concern. Lowlevel lead exposure has been linked to decreased performance on standardized IQ tests for schoolaged children. OBJECTIVE: In this study we sought to determine whether blood lead levels in early childhood are related to educational achievement in early elementary school as measured by performance on endof-grade (EOG) testing. METHODS: Educational testing data for 4th-grade students from the 2000--2004 North Carolina Education Research Data Center were linked to blood lead surveillance data for seven counties in North Carolina and then analyzed using exploratory and multivariate statistical methods. RESULTS: The discernible impact of blood lead levels on EOG testing is demonstrated for early childhood blood lead levels as low as 2 [micro]g/dL. A blood lead level of 5 [micro]g/dL is associated with a decline in EOG reading (and mathematics) scores that is roughly equal to 15% (14%) of the interquartile range, and this impact is very significant in comparison with the effects of covariates typically considered profoundly influential on educational outcomes. Early childhood lead exposures appear to have more impact on performance on the reading than on the mathematics portions of the tests. CONCLUSIONS: Our emphasis on population-level analyses of children who are roughly the same age linked to previous (rather than contemporaneous) blood lead levels using achievement (rather than aptitude) outcome complements the important work in this area by previous researchers. Our results suggest that the relationship between blood lead levels and cognitive outcomes are robust across outcome measures and at low levels of lead exposure. KEY WORDS: disparities, lead levels, school performance. Environ Health Perspect 115:1242--1247 (2007). doi:10.1289/ehp.9994 available via http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 27 April 2007]<br />Although much progress has been made, childhood lead poisoning remains a critical environmental health concern. Since the late 1970s, mounting research demonstrates that lead causes irreversible, asymptomatic effects far below [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00916765
Volume :
115
Issue :
8
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Environmental Health Perspectives
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.170116437