Abstract
This research investigates the relationships between airborne and depositional industrial lead emission concentrations modeled using Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) American Meteorological Society/Environmental Protection Agency Regulatory Model (AERMOD) and childhood blood lead levels (BLL) in the Detroit Metropolitan Area (DMA) 2006–2013. Linear and medi-ation interaction regression models estimated the effects of older housing and airborne and deposi-tional lead emission concentrations on black and white childhood BLLs, controlling for neighborhood levels of racial isolation and poverty—important social structures in the DMA. The results showed a direct relationship between airborne and depositional lead emissions and higher childhood BLL, after controlling for median housing age. Lead emissions also exacerbated the effect of older housing on black and white children’s BLLs (indirect relationship), after controlling for social structures. Findings from this research indicate that black and white children exposed to lead‐based paint/pipes in older housing are further impacted by industrial lead pollution that may lead to per-manent neurological damage.
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Moody, H. A., & Grady, S. C. (2021). Lead emissions and population vulnerability in the detroit metropolitan area, 2006–2013: Impact of pollution, housing age and neighborhood racial isolation and poverty on blood lead in children. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(5), 1–22. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052747
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