Abstract
The lead concentration in capillary blood was investigated in 49 preschool children (0.7-7.4 years of age) visiting a day-care center in a Swedish community with high lead contamination from mining and milling in soil and dust in populated areas [up to 1400 and 14000 μg·g-1 (6.76 and 67.63 μmol·g-1 of dry weight, respectively]. The blood lead levels were examined twice (in April and in September) in 33 of the children. The lead levels were low on both sampling occasions [arithmetic mean 31 (SD 13, median 30, range 13-79) μg·l-1, ie. arithmetic mean 0.15, (SD 0.06, median 0.14, range 0.06-0.38) μmol·l-1]. Whereas children up to four years of age showed significantly increased levels from April to September, a significant decrease was seen in older children. The level of lead in soil at home, gender, smoking habits at home, and estimated level of hand-to-mouth activity did not appear as strong determinants of lead in blood. The results indicate that lead from mine waste in soil and dust fallout does not constitute a significant health hazard for preschool children in Falun.
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Bjerre, B., Berglund, M., Harsbo, K., & Hellman, B. (1993). Blood lead concentrations of Swedish preschool children in a community with high lead levels from mine waste in soil and dust. Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health, 19(3), 154–161. https://doi.org/10.5271/sjweh.1487
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