Childhood lead exposure in the Palestinian Authority, Israel, and Jordan: results from the middle eastern regional cooperation project, 1996-2000.In the Middle East, the major sources of lead exposure have been leaded gasoline, lead-contaminated flour from traditional stone mills, focal exposures from small battery plants and smelters, and kohl (blue color) in cosmetics. In 1998-2000, we measured blood lead (PbB) levels in children 2-6 years of age in Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority Palestinian Authority (PA) or Palestinian National Authority, interim self-government body responsible for areas of the West Bank and Gaza Strip under Palestinian control. (n = 1478), using a fingerstick method. Mean (peak; percentage > 10 [micro]g/dL) PbB levels in Israel (n = 317), the West Bank (n = 344), Jordan (n = 382), and Gaza (n = 435) were 3.2 [micro]g/dL (18.2; 2.2%), 4.2 [micro]g/dL (25.7; 5.2%), 3.2 [micro]g/dL (39.3; < 1%), and 8.6 [micro]g/dL (> 80.0; 17.2%), respectively. High levels in Gaza were all among children living near a battery factory. The findings, taken together with data on time trends in lead emissions and in PbB in children in previous years, indicate the benefits from phasing out of leaded gasoline but state the case for further reductions and investigation of hot spots hot spots acute moist dermatitis. . The project demonstrated the benefits of regional cooperation in planning and carrying out a jointly designed project. Key words: ambient lead pollution, blood lead, childhood lead exposures, Middle East regional project. Environ Health Perspect 114:917-922 (2006). doi:10.1289/ehp.8339 available via http://dx.doi.org/[Online 24 January 2006] ********** The detection and prevention of lead toxicity and poisoning among children have been a major international public health priority. The distribution and severity of lead toxicity are determined largely by lead in gasoline emissions, proximity to environmental sources, point sources, hot spots, and episodic episodic sporadic; occurring in episodes. e. falling a paroxymal disorder described in Cavalier King Charles spaniels in which affected dogs, starting at an early age, experience episodes of extensor rigidity, possibly brought on by stress. e. exposures, sometimes from food sources (Richter 1992). Infants and children are more vulnerable to lead exposure because of more rapid airway airway /air·way/ (-wa) 1. the passage by which air enters and leaves the lungs. 2. a device for securing unobstructed respiration. and gastrointestinal absorption, hand-to-mouth activities, and increased susceptibility susceptibility the state of being susceptible. Refers usually to infectious disease but may be to physical factors such as wetting or to psychological factors such as harassment. of the developing brain to the neurotoxic neurotoxic pertaining to or emanating from a neurotoxin. neurotoxic state a case of poisoning by a neurotoxin. neurotoxic adjective effects of lead (Grigg 2004; Needleman 2004). High exposures produce acute poisoning, with abdominal pain Abdominal pain can be one of the symptoms associated with transient disorders or serious disease. Making a definitive diagnosis of the cause of abdominal pain can be difficult, because many diseases can result in this symptom. Abdominal pain is a common problem. , constipation constipation, infrequent or difficult passage of feces. Constipation may be caused by the lack of adequate roughage or fluid in the diet, prolonged physical inactivity, certain drugs, or emotional disturbance. , anemia anemia (ənē`mēə), condition in which the concentration of hemoglobin in the circulating blood is below normal. Such a condition is caused by a deficient number of erythrocytes (red blood cells), an abnormally low level of hemoglobin , irritability irritability /ir·ri·ta·bil·i·ty/ (ir?i-tah-bil´i-te) the quality of being irritable. myotatic irritability the ability of a muscle to contract in response to stretching. , bone and joint pain, and convulsions Convulsions Also termed seizures; a sudden violent contraction of a group of muscles. Mentioned in: Heat Disorders . Lead exposure has been linked to increased risk for diverse health outcomes, including infertility infertility, inability to conceive or carry a child to delivery. The term is usually limited to situations where the couple has had intercourse regularly for one year without using birth control. and cancer (Lustberg and Silbergeld 2002; Silbergeld 2003). Today, the major concerns regarding childhood lead exposures are the health risks associated with exposures once considered "normal." These low-level exposures produce subtle and not readily detectable neurobehavioral effects on personality, intellectual development, behavior, and achievement (Delville 1999; Mendelsohn et al. 1998). New data suggest that a safe threshold without adverse neurobehavioral effect is lower than the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. threshold of 10 [micro]g/dL for intervention, and that in fact a safe level may not be detectable (Canfield can·field n. Games A form of solitaire. [After Richard Albert Canfield (1855-1914), American gambler.] Noun 1. et al. 2003; Chiodo et al. 2004). In the Middle East today, the major reported point sources of lead exposure are industrial sources, including smelters, battery factories, and radiator radiator, device used to heat an area surrounding it or to cool a fluid circulating within it. The familiar radiators of steam and hot water heating systems in buildings are misnamed, as they operate principally by convection, in which heat is transferred by air repair shops; flour from traditional stone mills; and the occasional burning of wastes (El Sharif sha·rif n. Variant of sherif. et al. 2000; Hershko et al. 1989). Leaded gasoline remains the major source of environmental lead pollution, and > 300,000 tons of leaded gasoline are sold annually in Israel and the Palestinian Authority (Israel Ministry of Infrastructure 2004). Children of lead-exposed workers are at high risk for lead poisoning lead poisoning or plumbism (plŭm`bĭz'əm), intoxication of the system by organic compounds containing lead. (Friedman et al. 2005). Exposure and elevated blood lead (PbB) levels in children also comes from the use of traditional cosmetic kohl (kahal) among women and young girls (Nir 1992; Parry 1991). Isolated cases of lead poisoning from the use of dental powders such as Saoott and Cebagin, which can contain as much as 51% lead, have been reported (Abdullah 1984). Information has not been readily available on "background" community-wide sources, notably from gasoline and general air pollution by lead and from high-risk spots in crowded areas. Past work in Israel suggested nontrivial nontrivial - Requiring real thought or significant computing power. Often used as an understated way of saying that a problem is quite difficult or impractical, or even entirely unsolvable ("Proving P=NP is nontrivial"). The preferred emphatic form is "decidedly nontrivial". risks from lead exposure in urban areas at levels once considered safe (Richter et al. 1980, 1986). Results of previous studies on childhood lead exposure in the Palestinian Authority, Jordan, and Israel are summarized in Table 1. Investigation of an episode of familial familial /fa·mil·i·al/ (fah-mil´e-il) occurring in more members of a family than would be expected by chance. fa·mil·ial adj. lead poisoning led to the discovery that the source was flour contaminated contaminated, v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material. 2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials. 3. an infective surface or object. by lead from metal fittings of the axle axle Pin or shaft on or with which wheels revolve; with fixed wheels, one of the basic simple machines for amplifying force. Combined with the wheel, in its earliest form it was probably used for raising weights or water buckets from wells. on the stone grinding wheel, not only in the index village but also in many others (Hershko et al. 1989). A similar episode later occurred in eight children of a family that owned a flour mill in Hebron (El Sharif et al. 2000). We report the results of the childhood lead poisoning prevention study (1996-2000) in Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority supported by U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID USAID United States Agency for International Development USAID Agencia de los Estados Unidos para el Desarrollo Internacional (Spanish) )/Middle East Regional Cooperation-Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (West Bank and Gaza). The objectives of the study were a) to assess the distribution of PbB levels; b) to search for sources of exposure to lead among children in Israel, Jordan, Gaza, and the West Bank, including so-called "hot spots"; c) to assess the utility and practicality of screening, case finding, source identification, and prevention, using a new state-of-the art method for fingerstick (FS) measurement of PbB; d) to determine whether there is a need for routine surveillance and screening in each of the four regions; e) to determine whether reduction in use of leaded gasoline and total emissions resulted in reduction in PbB in children in the region; and f) to promote appropriate interventions. The outbreak of political conflict and violence in September 2000 disrupted progress toward the last objective. The four regions differ substantially from one another in terms of standard indices of development, socioeconomic status socioeconomic status, n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion. , and public health (Table 2). However, three of the four regions--Israel, West Bank, and Gaza--share a common source of fuel, and access to water in all four regions is closely interrelated in·ter·re·late tr. & intr.v. in·ter·re·lat·ed, in·ter·re·lat·ing, in·ter·re·lates To place in or come into mutual relationship. in . Lead emissions from stationary and mobile sources are also transported across boundaries as air pollution (Silbergeld 1995). Because socioeconomic status is often a predictor for lead exposure among children, we expected to find variations in PbB levels among the different regions. The advent of the LeadCare FS method offered new possibilities for cost-effective and efficient field investigations. Materials and Methods Population, study design, and sampling strategy. We chose children 2-6 years of age as the target population based on the assumption that their exposure to the outdoors and crawl zones would exceed that of younger infants. The project had two components. The first was a cross-sectional prevalence survey in all regions. The second component was measurement of PbB levels in children living near suspected hot spots--a situation that occurred in Gaza (see below). Each region was divided into subregions, which in turn were sampled. The testing was carried out in 1998-2000. A parent or guardian gave written and oral informed consent for each child, according the Institutional Review Board requirements. For the prevalence study, the design and sampling methods took into account differing population distributions, age patterns, residential distribution, anticipated prevalence, patterns of clustering of high PbB levels, percentage of responders, and funding and time constraints In law, time constraints are placed on certain actions and filings in the interest of speedy justice, and additionally to prevent the evasion of the ends of justice by waiting until a matter is moot. . The investigators used a stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers. strat·i·fied adj. Arranged in the form of layers or strata. two-stage cluster probability design for each of the regions. Each had different systems for defining and enumerating neighborhoods, houses, and children. In the Gaza and West Bank studies, the teams also identified areas near point sources of environmental lead contamination. In Gaza, the project team divided the region into 48 primary sampling units (PSUs) and selected a fixed number of children from within each PSU PSU - power supply unit . The main sources of exposure were smelters, battery recycling Battery recycling is an recycling activity that aims to reduce the amount of batteries going into landfills. It is widely promoted by environmentalists who want to lower the presence of heavy metals and other toxic chemicals in the environment. units, and other industries using lead. The team examined one child 2-6 years of age in the house located nearest the source or, if no source was found, nearest the main street. This task was repeated until the required number of children were sampled in each PSU. In Israel, the team attempted to select areas identified as meeting at least one of the following criteria as a PSU: an area with heavy traffic density, a population from a lower socioeconomic standard, an area with old constructed houses, or an area with a point source of lead--for example, an industry using lead. In addition to PbB measurement, they measured zinc protoporphyrin protoporphyrin /pro·to·por·phy·rin/ (-por´fi-rin) any of several porphyrin isomers, one of which is an intermediate in heme biosynthesis; it is accumulated and excreted excessively in feces in erythropoietic protoporphyria and variegate (ZPP zpp Zirconium Production Plant ZPP Zinc Proto-Porphyrin ZPP Zirconium Potassium Perchlorate ZPP Zero Probability Polynomial (complexity theory, randomized algorithms) ZPP Zero Padded Prefix ) in the study population. In Israel, major problems of access and response resulted in underrepresentation of urban areas, as well as possible underrepresentation of hot spots. In the West Bank, the sources of lead pollution included industrial hot spots and traffic congestion The condition of a network when there is not enough bandwidth to support the current traffic load. congestion - When the offered load of a data communication path exceeds the capacity. . The PSUs were the 10 cities with populations [greater than or equal to] 50,000. In each PSU in the West Bank, the team identified maternity and child health (MCH See Intel Hub Architecture. ) centers administered by the government, United Nations Relief and Works Agency, or nongovernmental organization nongovernmental organization (NGO) Organization that is not part of any government. A key distinction is between not-for-profit groups and for-profit corporations; the vast majority of NGOs are not-for-profit. , located on or within 100 m of the heavy-traffic streets. If the team found a child to have PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL, they took a repeat blood sample for confirmation. In Jordan, the PSUs were nine governates, each with a population of > 100,000 inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. . In each of the governates, the team selected children from a proportional number of MCH centers located [less than or equal to] 200 m from the main streets. To search for childhood exposures near suspect "hot spots" in each area, we set aside a number of examinations reserved for areas or situations designated as high-risk "hot spots"--for example, areas where we suspected increased exposures to lead. These also include children of adults employed in professions that are associated with exposure to lead. Information on sociodemographics, potential exposures, and health status. We developed a questionnaire, which was translated into Arabic, Hebrew, and Russian, for collection of information and pretested it in the field. Demographic information on the child; family status; household, dietary, and environmental sources of exposure; and health status was collected by one-on-one interviews based on the questionnaire. A follow-up study will report the distribution and determinants of PbB levels in relation to these sources. PbB and ZPP. All teams used the LeadCare kits (Esa Biosciences Inc., Chelmsford, MA, USA; Esa Biosciences Inc. 2005; Pineau et al. 2002), a validated method for accurately measuring lead levels in FS blood specimens. A 2-day training session was held for the field staff from all four regions on how to use the equipment in the field. The equipment remains available for use in each region after the completion of the project. For ZPP measurements, blood samples were collected from the same FS and analyzed using the Aviv Hematofluorometer (Aviv Biomedical bi·o·med·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to biomedicine. 2. Of, relating to, or involving biological, medical, and physical sciences. Inc., Lakewood, NJ, USA). Blood samples were collected in schools, kindergartens, and nurseries. Quality assurance. We compared the results of the FS method versus venipuncture venipuncture /veni·punc·ture/ (ven?i-pungk´chur) surgical puncture of a vein. ve·ni·punc·ture or ve·ne·punc·ture n. , based on specimens taken from consenting adults consenting adults npl → adultos con capacidad de consentir consenting adults npl → personnes consentantes consenting adults npl . Quality assurance/quality control assessments of the method determined the reliability, accuracy, and precision of the method in each region. The teams used the LeadCare Quality Control Sheet for testing standards (one low, one high) before and after each testing session. Response rate and selection biases. In all districts in the West Bank, Gaza, and Jordan, response rates were generally high among parents, but we could not calculate precise rates. In Gaza, it was necessary to modify the plan to include only one child from each household. In Israel, we had trouble gaining access to districts in urban areas with high traffic. In all areas, if parents asked that their other children be tested, we did the test but did not include results from these children in the reported results. We refused no child a blood test. The teams notified the families of the children found with high PbB levels and advised them to see their physician or hospital pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. services. Time trends in lead emissions. Data on total lead emissions in Israel came from the Central Bureau of Statistics (Statistical Abstract of Israel 2004), and data on prior PbB levels in children came from previous studies, as listed in Table 1. This project began in 1996; we completed the fieldwork field·work n. 1. A temporary military fortification erected in the field. 2. Work done or firsthand observations made in the field as opposed to that done or observed in a controlled environment. 3. in 1999-2000, the data analysis in 2001-2002, and writeups in 2004-2005. Results The results of the pretest pre·test n. 1. a. A preliminary test administered to determine a student's baseline knowledge or preparedness for an educational experience or course of study. b. A test taken for practice. 2. showed a high degree of reliability for the FS, but the [beta]-coefficient for variance indicates a tendency toward slight systematic upward error in the West Bank and Gaza, with much higher systematic error in Israel, suggesting the possibility of skin surface contamination (Table 3). In Israel, the fact that the pattern of results was consistent with exposure circumstances led us to conclude that errors in accuracy and precision decreased during the project. Table 4 and Figures 1-4 present the results of this study in each of the four regions. The findings show that the risk for PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL in children 2-6 years of age was 2.2% in Israel, < 1% in Jordan, 5.2% in West Bank, and 17.2% in Gaza. In the West Bank and Gaza, the percentages of children with PbB levels between 5 and 9.9 [micro]g/dL were 21.5 and 26.2%, respectively, compared with 14 and 12%, respectively, in Israel and Jordan. In Gaza, there were defined hot spots for risk related to proximity to local small-industry--type smelters engaged in secondary recycling, smelting smelting, in metallurgy, any process of melting or fusion, especially to extract a metal from its ore. Smelting processes vary in detail depending on the nature of the ore and the metal involved, but they are typified in the use of the blast furnace. , and battery manufacture. All the children in Gaza with PbB levels > 10 [micro]g/dL lived in the vicinity of a battery factory or smelter. In the West Bank, although no extreme hot spots were detected, the relatively higher percentage of children with PbB levels > 5.0 [micro]g/dL was noteworthy. Because only two of all those tested in the West Bank lived near a smelter or battery factory, the findings might suggest a higher representation of children living near high-traffic zones. In Israel, 268 (84.5%) of 317 of children tested had PbB levels < 5 [micro]g/dL (Table 4, Figure 2), with most of the values in the range of 2-2.9 [micro]g/dL. Among children from Jewish areas, maximum values were highest in Jerusalem (4.7 [micro]g/dL), Bnei Brak For the Biblical city, see . Bnei Brak (or Bene Beraq) (Hebrew: בְּנֵי בְּרַק, (8.9 [micro]g/dL), and Haifa (8.0 [micro]g/dL). There were higher mean, median, and maximum values in Bedouin and Druze areas, where children play more outdoors in less controlled settings, compared with Jewish areas. Children in Yarka, a Druze village far from urban air pollution, had the highest mean and maximum values. Seven children in Yarka had PbB > 10.0 [micro]g/dL. Table 5 and Figure 5 present distributions for ZPP in Israel. Because PbB levels were generally well below the threshold for increased levels of ZPP, there was no correlation between elevation in ZPP and elevation in PbB (see "Discussion"). Figure 6 shows the time trends in lead emissions from fuel combustion in Israel and PbB in children, based on prior studies and results from this study in Israel. Over a 17-year period, lead emissions had fallen 85% from 540 tons in 1985 to 90 tons in 2003. There is a high correlation (r = 0.85) between lead emissions and blood levels in children, in keeping with a relationship in which reduction of approximately 30 tons of lead emissions led to a drop of approximately 0.5 [micro]g/dL, but the data show intercity in·ter·cit·y adj. Relating to, involving, or connecting two or more cities: intercity rivalry; an intercity bus. Intercity Adjective trademark differences in mean values in 1995 and 1999. Furthermore, within Israel, in Haifa and Jerusalem, two cities for which we had data from 1995, blood levels in children in our study were much lower (3.4 and 2.4 [micro]g/dL, respectively) than those based on results from bloods collected in 1995 (Fischbein et al. 1996). In Jordan, most (55%) of the children examined (n = 382) had PbB < 3 [micro]g/dL, and three children (< 1%) had PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL. In the West Bank, 18 (5.2%) of 344 children examined had PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL (Table 4, Figure 3). Most children (73.3%) had PbB levels < 5 [micro]g/dL, and 99.1% of the children did not live near a known point source of lead contamination. Of the 435 children examined in Gaza, 75 (17.2%) had PbB [greater than or equal to] 10 [micro]g/dL, and 31 (7.1%) had PbB > 20 [micro]g/dL. All 75 children with PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL came from a subgroup sub·group n. 1. A distinct group within a group; a subdivision of a group. 2. A subordinate group. 3. Mathematics A group that is a subset of a group. tr.v. of 108 (24.8%) children living adjacent to a smelter, a battery plant, or both, a finding that suggests some 60% of children living near these sites were at risk for lead poisoning. Table 6 shows the percentage of children in Gaza living near a source of lead pollution. We analyzed the Gaza data on PbB in relation to living near sites of battery recycling, near a smelter, or near battery manufacturing (Tables 6, 7). There were strong associations between PbB levels and living near battery recycling [odds ratio (OR) = 13], a smelter (OR = 2.66), or battery manufacturing (OR = 9.5), and inverse (mathematics) inverse - Given a function, f : D -> C, a function g : C -> D is called a left inverse for f if for all d in D, g (f d) = d and a right inverse if, for all c in C, f (g c) = c and an inverse if both conditions hold. correlations between blood levels and distance from these sites. In contrast, there was a positive correlation Noun 1. positive correlation - a correlation in which large values of one variable are associated with large values of the other and small with small; the correlation coefficient is between 0 and +1 direct correlation between PbB and distance from a major road (+ 0.204). These data strongly suggest the specificity of the association between PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL and proximity to the point sources. Discussion The present study, the largest multinational survey of its kind in the Middle East, achieved its major objectives: defining the current status of lead exposure in children in Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority; identifying hot spots; determining whether reduction in use of leaded gasoline resulted in reduction in PbB in children in the region; and introducing low-cost, reliable, and accurate state-of-the-art methods for determining PbB levels for purposes of surveillance, screening, targeted investigation and case finding. Despite the major socioeconomic differences between Israel, Jordan, the West Bank, and Gaza, PbB levels in children 2-6 years of age were strikingly within the same range--except for children living near hot spots. The mean and geometric levels in the region are now approaching those of Northern Europe and the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , where mean PbB levels in children range between 2.1 and 2.7 [micro]g/dL (Pirkle 1998; Ponka 1998; Stromberg 2003; Wilhelm et al. 2002). Although this study was not a classic representative sample, the cluster design enabled us to sample groups throughout the country in many different exposure settings. The findings, taken together with results of previous surveys in Israel, and a separate parallel study in Jordan (Dabbas and Al-Zoubi 2000) showing average levels of approximately 2.0 [micro]g/dL, suggest that the decline in PbB levels in children in the region is attributable to the progressive phasing out of leaded gasoline. The 85% drop in lead emissions in Israel explains the fall of population-wide PbB levels in Israeli children from 14.3 [micro]g/dL in the 1980s to 6.0 [micro]g/dL in the mid-1990s, to those currently reported. Apart from hot spots, the mean PbB levels were approximately comparable in all regions. It therefore is plausible that the association between decreased lead emissions and decreased PbB levels in children in Israel parallels trends in the entire region. We discovered a major hot spot in Gaza. We cannot rule out the possibility of other hot spots, especially in poorer areas, or high-risk situations, for example, among children of radiator repair workers, as occurred in Israel. Lead and ZPP. The lack of correlation between PbB and ZPP in Israel was expected because the PbB level was below the threshold for inducing elevation of ZPP. Therefore, it is reasonable to suggest that where ZPP levels were increased, iron deficiency iron deficiency A relative or absolute deficiency of iron which may be due to chelation in the GI tract, loss due to acute or chronic hemorrhage or dietary insufficiency Sources Meat, poultry, eggs, vegetables, cereals, especially if fortified with iron; per the may be the cause. Because 0-2 years is the peak age group for iron deficiency, we were not reaching the high-risk group high-risk group Epidemiology A group of people in the community with a higher-than-expected risk for developing a particular disease, which may be defined on a measurable parameter–eg, an inherited genetic defect, physical attribute, lifestyle, habit, by age. Our findings suggest the need to investigate the hypothesis that a much larger percentage of children in the 1- to 2-year age group are at risk for iron deficiency, not only in Israel but also in the West Bank, Gaza, and Jordan. Limitations. The project continued throughout the political upheavals and episodic violence in the region. However, follow-through on all the objectives, notably, promoting intervention targeted at the point sources, was disrupted. There were several limitations of this study. In Israel, inner cities were underrepresented un·der·rep·re·sent·ed adj. Insufficiently or inadequately represented: the underrepresented minority groups, ignored by the government. . Health officials were reluctant to mobilize mo·bi·lize v. 1. To make mobile or capable of movement. 2. To restore the power of motion to a joint. 3. To release into the body, as glycogen from the liver. support for a community survey based on blood tests for which there was a low probability of detection The Probability of Detection is a term used in Radar sets. The radar system must detect, with greater than or equal to 80% probability at a definied range, a one square meter radar cross section. The received and demodulated echo signal is processed by a threshold logic. of clinical illness in individual children. The overall results were driven by the overrepresentation of one village. Also, response and participation of children from families living along roads with heavy traffic were low. We had problems gaining access to at least one major hot spot in Israel--600 children in a school near a smelter battery factory in the north of the country (Kfar Vradim Kfar Vradim (Hebrew: כפר ורדים) is a town (local council) in northern Israel, with a population of 5500 (2004). ), who, at the time of this writing, reportedly had been exposed to lead in previous years. The risks from these exposures have never been studied. In Gaza, there were problems with follow-through in investigating and promoting interventions to abate abate v. to do away with a problem, such as a public or private nuisance or some structure built contrary to public policy. This can include dikes which illegally direct water onto a neighbors property, high volume noise from a rock band or a factory, an improvement the exposures from the lead smelter and battery plant. Except for Gaza, the sampling strategies aimed at defining a so-called representative study may have led to skipping over hot spots or higher-risk areas and therefore may have produced underestimates of risks from focal point focal point n. See focus. sources. Even so, the modified cluster design enabled us to look at the mean, median, geometric mean (mathematics) geometric mean - The Nth root of the product of N numbers. If each number in a list of numbers was replaced with their geometric mean, then multiplying them all together would still give the same result. , and range of PbB levels in an array of settings. Another limitation, leading to possible underestimates, is that we could not gain access to children < 2 years of age, the age at which PbB peaks in the United States. This is an age group in which hand-to-mouth routes disproportionately contribute to PbB burdens. On the other hand, older children have more exposure outside the household, and therefore, their levels better reflect airborne lead levels. A subsequent study will report lead levels in age subgroups (Witt J, unpublished observations). In all regions, we were unable to directly carry out follow-up by confirming PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL with a venous venous /ve·nous/ (ve´nus) pertaining to the veins. ve·nous adj. Of, relating to, or contained in the veins. venous pertaining to the veins. sample. Finally, the study did not examine interactions between exposures to lead and iron deficiency, a problem that may be widespread among the youngest children. Reduction of exposure. This study documents the results of substantial progress in reducing lead in gasoline in the region, based on comparison with results of PbB in earlier years. However, in both Israel and Jordan, leaded gasoline has not been completely phased out. We recommend expediting the transition to lead-free gasoline, but note with great concern the new-generation substitute additives (e.g., methyl tert-butyl ether Methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE) is a chemical compound with molecular formula C5H12O. MTBE is a volatile, flammable and colorless liquid that is highly soluble in water. , platinum, manganese manganese (măng`gənēs, măn`–) [Lat.,=magnet], metallic chemical element; symbol Mn; at. no. 25; at. wt. 54.938; m.p. about 1,244°C;; b.p. about 1,962°C;; sp. gr. 7.2 to 7. ) with known toxic risks, whose public health effects have not yet been defined and that remain point source occupational exposures to fuel attendants (Ahmed 2001; Normandin et al. 2002). Surveillance and case finding. Findings suggesting the absence of a detectable threshold for neurobehavioral effects in children indicate the possibility of population-wide risks for children from exposures < 5 [micro]g/dL. But as leaded gasoline continues to be phased out, it is not certain that there is a case for routine mass screening of all children in Israel, Jordan, and the West Bank. But there is a case for surveillance and episodic spot checks, as part of national surveys and screening within the framework of a comprehensive approach to child health and development, preferably as part of the currently operating national nutrition and child health surveillance system. In Gaza, where we estimate that there were at least several thousand children residing in neighborhoods close to hot spots and industrial point sources for lead, there is a case for targeted epidemiologic investigation of risks and intervention. Overall, we suggest that sampling strategies should be focused on high-risk areas and so-called hot spots. Sampling strategies aimed at obtaining a so-called true representative level may divert scarce resources from identifying these high-risk areas or hot spots. We recommend that the priority target areas should be hot spots near smelters, battery recycling, and battery repair; corridors along heavy trafficked roads; and children of workers with occupational exposures to lead. Targeted surveillance for lead, along with iron deficiency, should be part of primary health care for children. Today, examinations can be based on collection from one FS of several drops of blood for hemoglobin hemoglobin (hē`məglō'bĭn), respiratory protein found in the red blood cells (erythrocytes) of all vertebrates and some invertebrates. , ZPP, and PbB. In all regions, there is a case for equipping several primary medical care centers with the LeadCare kit and ZPP meter for surveys, selective screening targeted at suspect or special situations, and investigations triggered by sentinel sentinel /sen·ti·nel/ (sen´ti-n'l) one who gives a warning or indicates danger. sentinel a recording mechanism, such as an animal, a farm or a veterinarian, posted explicitly to record a possible occurrence or series of cases. There remain problems with activating follow-through investigations for sources in all the four study areas. Industrial hygiene. There is a need for a uniform transborder regional level of lead protection based on best possible industrial standards. To achieve this goal, there is a need for a major investment in industrial upgrading, training, and surveillance. An earlier study demonstrated high levels of lead poisoning and neurotoxic damage in lead battery workers from Gaza working in an Israeli smelter (Hashish hashish (hăsh`ēsh, –ĭsh), resin extracted from the flower clusters and top leaves of the hemp plant, Cannabis sativa, and C. indica. M and Richter ED, unpublished data). In all regions, there is a need to gain access to children at risk of exposure from industrial sources, either by proximity to point sources or as children of workers. There is a need to activate labor inspectorates to trace worker populations at risk. Projects to identify children at risk should be used to locate workers at risk. In conclusion, we recommend the following actions: a) surveillance and episodic checks at "hot spots," including corridors along heavily trafficked roads and battery factories, smelters, and auto radiator repair; b) targeted surveillance for lead, iron deficiency, and ZPP in all regions; c) equipping primary medical care centers in each region with LeadCare kits and ZPP meters; and d) reducing lead emissions from industrial sources of lead pollution, especially in Gaza. CORRECTION The order of authors has been changed from that in the original published online, and two co-authors, Matti Bercovitch and Efim Platkov, have been added. REFERENCES Abdullah MA. 1984. Lead poisoning among children in Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (sä `dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–), officially Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, kingdom (2005 est. pop. . J
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Data on Fuel Consumption in Israel and the Palestinian Authority, 2004. Jerusalem:Israel Ministry of Infrastructure. Available: http://www.mni.gov.il/heb/units/dellek.shtm [accessed 10 January 2005]. Jordan Department of Statistics. 1994. Jordanian Statistics, Population, 1994. Amman:Jordan Department of Statistics. Available: http://www.dos.gov.jo/jo%20statistical.html [accessed 15 June 2002]. Lein Y. 2000. Thirsty thirst·y adj. thirst·i·er, thirst·i·est 1. Desiring to drink. 2. Arid; parched: thirsty fields. 3. Craving something: thirsty for news. for a Solution: The Water Crisis in the Occupied Territories This article is about occupied territory in general: for more specific discussion of the territories captured by Israel in the Six-Day War, see Israeli-occupied territories. Occupied territories and Its Resolution in Final-Status Agreement. Jerusalem:B'tselem. Lustberg M, Silbergeld E. 2002. Blood lead levels and mortality. Arch Intern intern /in·tern/ (in´tern) a medical graduate serving in a hospital preparatory to being licensed to practice medicine. in·tern or in·terne n. Med 162(21):2443-2449. Mendelsohn AL, Dreyer BP, Fierman AH, Rosen CM, Legano LA, Kruger HA, et al. 1998. Low-level lead exposure and behavior in early childhood. Pediatrics 101(3):E10. Available: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/101/3/e10 [accessed 8 May 2006]. National Insurance Institute. 2000. Jewish Virtual Library The Jewish Virtual Library is an online encyclopedia published by the American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise (AICE), notable for its strong pro-Israel views. It includes about 10,000 articles and 5,000 photographs and maps related to Jewish history, Israel, U.S. . Available: http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Economy/pov98.html [accessed 1 July 2002]. Needleman H. 2004. Lead poisoning. Annu Rev Med 55:209-222. Nir A, Tamir A, Zelnik N, Iancu TC. 1992. Is eye cosmetic a source of lead poisoning? Isr J Med Sci 28(7):417-421. Normandin L, Panisset M, Zayed J. 2002. Manganese neurotoxicity neurotoxicity /neu·ro·tox·ic·i·ty/ (noor?o-tok-sis´it-e) the quality of exerting a destructive or poisonous effect upon nerve tissue. : behavioral, pathological 1. pathological - [scientific computation] Used of a data set that is grossly atypical of normal expected input, especially one that exposes a weakness or bug in whatever algorithm one is using. , and biochemical bi·o·chem·is·try n. 1. The study of the chemical substances and vital processes occurring in living organisms; biological chemistry; physiological chemistry. 2. effects following various routes of exposure. Rev Environ Health 17(3):189-217. Palestine Central Bureau of Statistics. 2000. Palestine-1999. Statistical Abstract of Palestine No 1. Gaza, Palestine. Available: http://www.pcbs.gov.ps/Portals/_PCBS/Downloads/book678.pdf [accessed 1 June 2002]. Palestinian National Authority Noun 1. Palestinian National Authority - combines the Gaza Strip and the West Bank under a political unit with limited autonomy and a police force; created in 1993 by an agreement between Israel and the PLO Palestine Authority, Palestine National Authority Ministry of Health. 2001. 2000 Annual Report. Gaza, Palestine:Health Information Center, Ministry of Health. Parry C, Eaton J. 1991. Kohl: a lead-hazardous eye makeup from the Third World to the First World. Environ Health Perspect 94:121-123. Pineau A, Fauconneau B, Rafael M, Viallefont A, Guillard O. 2002. Determination of lead in whole blood: comparison of the LeadCare blood lead testing system with Zeeman longitudinal electrothermal e·lec·tro·ther·mal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or involving both electricity and heat. 2. Of or relating to the production of heat by electricity. atomic absorption spectrometry Absorption spectrometry A scientific procedure to determine chemical makeup of samples. Mentioned in: Herbalism, Traditional Chinese . J Trace Elem Med Biol 16(2):113-117. Pirkle JL, Kaufmann RB, Brody DJ, Hickman T, Gunter EW, Paschal DC. 1998. Exposure of the U.S. population to lead, 1991-1994. Environ Health Perspect 106:745-750. Ponka A. 1998. Lead in the ambient air and blood of children in Helsinki. Sci Total Environ 219(1):1-5. Richter ED. 1992. "Acceptable" lead exposures in Israel: do they lower childhood IQ and damage workers' health? Isr J Med Sci 28(7):454-458. Richter ED, Berant M, Grauer F, Tamir A, Berkowitz A, Oppenheim D. 1986. Zinc protoporphyrin levels in children in Haifa--a pilot study. Sci Total Environ 48:109-121. Richter ED, Yaffe Y, Gruener N, Neyman S. 1980. Lead exposures: effects in Israel. Isr J Med Sci 16(2):89-95. Silbergeld EK. 1995. The international dimensions of lead exposure. Int J Occup Environ Health 1(4):336-348. Silbergeld EK. 2003. Facilitative mechanisms of lead as a carcinogen carcinogen: see cancer. carcinogen Agent that can cause cancer. Exposure to one or more carcinogens, including certain chemicals, radiation, and certain viruses, can initiate cancer under conditions not completely understood. . Mutat Res 533(1-2):121-133. Statistical Abstract of Israel. 2001. Population and National Accounts, 2000. Jerusalem:Israel Central Bureau of Statistics The Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (Hebrew: הלשכה המרכזית לסטטיסטיקה, . Available: http://www.cbs.gov.il/shnaton52/shnatone52.htm [accessed 5 January 2005]. Statistical Abstract of Israel. 2004. Emissions from fuel combustion. Jerusalem:Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Available: http://www1.cbs.gov.il/reader/shnatonenew.htm [accessed 5 January 2005]. Stromberg U, Lundh T, Schutz A, Skerfving S. 2003. Yearly measurements of blood lead in Swedish children since 1978: an update focusing on the petrol lead free period 1995-2001. Occup Environ Med 60:370-372. Wilhelm M, Pesch A, Rostek U, Begerow J, Schmitz N, Idel H, et al. 2002. Concentrations of lead in blood, hair and saliva saliva Thick, colourless fluid constantly present in the mouth, composed of water, mucus, proteins, mineral salts, and amylase, an enzyme that breaks down starches. One to two litres are produced daily by the salivary glands. of German children living in three different areas of traffic density. Sci Total Environ 297(1-3):109-118. World Bank. 2000. Data and Statistics: Israel, Jordan, West Bank and Gaza, 2000. Washington, DC:World Bank. Available: http://www.worldbank.org/data/countrydata/countrydata.html [accessed 15 June 2002]. Jamal Safi, (1) Alf Fischbein, (2) Sameer El Haj, (3) Ramzi Sansour, (3) Madi Jaghabir, (4) Mohammed Abu Hashish, (1) Hassan Suleiman, (1) Nimer Safi, (1) Abed Abu-Hamda, (5) Joyce K. Witt, (6) Efim Platkov, (2) Steven Reingold, (7) Amber Alayyan, (8) Tamar Berman, (6) Matti Bercovitch, (9) Yogesh Choudhri, (10) and Elihu D. Richter (6) (1) Environmental Protection and Research Institute, Gaza, Palestinian Authority; (2) Sanz Medical Center, Netanya, and Selikoff Center for Environmental Health and Human Development, Ra'anana, Israel; (3) Center for Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, Birzeit University Birzeit University (Arabic: جامعة بيرزيت) is a university near the Arab town of Bir Zeit near Ramallah. , Birzeit, Palestinian Authority; (4) Department of Community and Preventive Medicine preventive medicine, branch of medicine dealing with the prevention of disease and the maintenance of good health practices. Until recently preventive medicine was largely the domain of the U.S. , School of Medicine, Jordan University, Amman, Jordan; (5) Kupat Holim Meuhedet, Yerka, Israel; (6) Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel; (7) Department of Pediatrics, Maimonides Hospital, Brooklyn, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , USA; (8) School of Medicine, New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the , New York, New York, USA; (9) Pharmacology pharmacology, study of the changes produced in living animals by chemical substances, especially the actions of drugs, substances used to treat disease. Systematic investigation of the effects of drugs based on animal experimentation and the use of isolated and and Clinical Toxicology Unit, Assaf Harofeh Medical Center, Zerifin, Israel; (10) Health Canada Health Canada (French: Santé Canada) is the department of the government of Canada with responsibility for national public health. Health Canada's goal is to improve Canadian life by improving Canadian longevity, lifestyle and use of public healthcare. , Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Address correspondence to E.D. Richter, Hadassah School of Public Health and Community Medicine, P.O. Box 12272, Jerusalem 91120 Israel. Telephone: 972-2-6758147. Fax: 972-2-6784010. E-mail: elir@cc.huji.ac.il We thank L. Rosenblum (deceased), R. Walling, H. Falk, and G. Noonan of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979 Health and Human Services, HHS and the many fieldworkers in this project for their support and encouragement. This project was funded by grants from U.S. Agency for International Development-Middle East Regional Cooperation, the Government of Canada The Government of Canada is the federal government of Canada. The powers and structure of the federal government are set out in the Constitution of Canada. In modern Canadian use, the term "government" (or "federal government") refers broadly to the cabinet of the day and via the Israel-Palestinian Center for Research Information, the American Friends of Sanz Medical Center, and Friends of the Selikoff Center for Environmental Health and Human Development. The authors declare they have no competing financial interests. Received 19 May 2005; accepted 23 January 2006.
Table 1. Previous studies on lead exposure in the Palestinian Authority,
Jordan, and Israel.
Year Population PbB ([micro]g/dL) Reference
1982 Children, Haifa Bay ZPP < 40 [micro]g/dL Richter et al. 1986
PbB mean, 12.1
ZPP > 40 [micro]g/dL
PbB mean, 15.5
1983 Teachers, Jerusalem 8.6 (median) Friberg and Vahter
1983
1990 Children and infants, Mean, 4.3; Nir et al. 1992
Druze village mean kohl users,
11-12
1995 Children, Mean, 6.0; Fischbein et al.
Netanya Hospital 9% > 10 [micro]g/dL 1996
1995 Children, Mean, 7.0; Fischbein et al.
East Jerusalem 80% > 5 [micro]g/dL 1996
2000 Jordanian population Mean, 1.96 Dabbas and Al-Zoubi
(representative sample) 2000
Table 2. Statistical information for Jordan, West Bank and Gaza, and
Israel.
West Bank
Jordan and Gaza Israel
Population (millions) 4.91 3.12 6.33
Percent population < 5 years of 15.04 18.52 9.15
age
Illiteracy (% > 15 years of age) 4.9 M 10.23 3.2 M
16.1 F 7.6 F
GDP per capita (US$) 1693.91 1484.52 17523.81
Infant mortality (no. per live 25.31 22.01 5.51
1,000 births)
Population with access to
improved water sources (%) 96.0 84.8 99.0
Population with piped sewage (%) 100 34 WB NA
53.5G
Unemployment (%) NA 47 7.7 (1997)
Poverty (%) 12 55 (2000) 18 (1999)
Urban population (%) 74.2 NA 91.2
Water consumption (L/capita/day) NA 706 3,506
Abbreviations: F, female; G, Gaza; GDP, gross domestic product; M, male;
NA, not available; WB, West Bank. Data are relevant for the study period
1999-2000 (Jordan Department of Statistics 1994; Lein 2000; National
Insurance Institute 2000; Palestine Central Bureau of Statistics 2000;
Palestinian National Authority Ministry of Health 2001; Statistical
Abstract of Israel 2001; World Bank 2000).
Table 3. Results of the pretest in consenting adults: FS method (y)
compared with venous stick (x) and [beta]-variance.
Israel West Bank Gaza
y 0.265x + 3.227 0.763x + 1.083 0.5714x + 0.662
R 0.42 0.89 0.84
Table 4. Summary findings: Gaza, Israel, West Bank, and Jordan, 1999-
2000.
Gaza Israel
No. 435 317
Geometric mean ([micro]g/dL) 5.2 2.7
Mean ([micro]g/dL) 8.6 3.21
Median ([micro]g/dL) 4.3 2.6
Range ([micro]g/dL) 0.5-124.4 0.4-18.2
No. (%), 5-9.9 [micro]g/dL 114 (26.2) 43 (14.0)
No. (%), [greater than or equal to] 10 75 (17.2) (a) 7 (2.2)
[micro]g/dL
West Bank Jordan
No. 344 382
Geometric mean ([micro]g/dL) 3.3 1.4
Mean ([micro]g/dL) 4.20 3.22
Median ([micro]g/dL) 3.3 2.9
Range ([micro]g/dL) 0.4-25.7 0.4-39.3
No. (%), 5-9.9 [micro]g/dL 74 (21.5) 46 (12.0)
No. (%), [greater than or equal to] 10 18 (5.2) 3 (0.8)
[micro]g/dL
PbB values > 60 [micro]g/dL were estimated using a dilution technique.
(a) All among children living in the vicinity of a battery factory or
smelter.
Table 5. PbB and ZPP levels in 317 Israeli children.
PbB ([micro]g/dL)
Location No. Mean Median Minimum Maximum
Urban
Beer Sheva 7 1.93 1.7 1.4 2.7
Bnei Brak 57 2.6 2.3 1.3 8.9
Haifa 11 3.36 2.9 1.2 8.0
Herzliya 5 2.14 2.2 1.6 2.9
Jerusalem 11 2.39 1.7 0.9 4.7
Petach Tikveh 1 NA NA 2.0 2.0
Rural near smelter
Kisra (Druze) 19 3.32 3.5 1.3 7.5
Kfar Vradim 22 2.50 2.4 1.0 6.5
Rural
Maalot 2 1.9 1.9 1.8 2.0
Nof Yam 6 2.2 1.95 1.4 3.5
Araar (Bedouin) 18 2.64 2.05 1.3 6.5
Yarka (Druze) 157 3.79 3.1 0.4 18.2
Mitzpe Ramon 1 NA NA 0.80 0.80
ZPP ([micro]mol/mol heme)
Location Mean Median Minimum Maximum
Urban
Beer Sheva 62.86 65 30 112
Bnei Brak 56.93 49 6.10 250
Haifa 46.91 48 29 75
Herzliya 44.60 47 27 70
Jerusalem 55.36 48 1.0 80
Petach Tikveh NA NA 72 72
Rural near smelter
Kisra (Druze) 32.37 27 18 125
Kfar Vradim 29.90 28 20 49
Rural
Maalot 32 32 28 36
Nof Yam 37.83 35 25 64
Araar (Bedouin) 50.67 43.5 28 110
Yarka (Druze) 47.56 42 23 180
Mitzpe Ramon NA NA 25 25
NA, not available.
Table 6. PbB levels in children in Gaza, according to proximity to lead
contamination sources: smelter, battery manufacturing plant, and battery
recycling plant.
Proximity to PbB ([micro]g/dL)
contamination source No. of children (%) [mean (range)]
No contamination sources 324 (74.5) 4.9 (4.5-5.3)
One contamination source 33 (7.6) 8.7 (4.7-12.7)
Two contamination sources 61 (14.0) 14.9 (11.1-18.7)
Three contamination sources 14 (3.2) 13.5 (6.8-20.2)
Missing 3 (0.7) --
Proximity to PbB > 10 [micro]g/dL
contamination source [no. (%)] OR
No contamination sources 24 (7.4) 1.0
One contamination source 6 (21.7) 3.3
Two contamination sources 30 (50.8) 12.9
Three contamination sources 4 (33) 6.3
Missing -- --
Table 7. Risk from living near source of lead exposure in Gaza:
correlation coefficient.
No. of children PbB > 10
Study factor PbB < 10 [micro]g/dL [micro]g/dL
House near major road
House near battery recycling
No 312 25
Yes 40 50
House near smelter
No 346 65
Yes 14 7
House near battery manufacturing
No 323 36
Yes 37 39
Distance
Study factor OR from source (r)
House near major road +0.204
House near battery recycling
No 13 (p < 0.00) -0.512
Yes
House near smelter
No 2.66 (p = 0.03) -0.392
Yes
House near battery manufacturing
No 9.5 (p < 0.000) -0.501
Yes
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