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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Mar 29 2017

Full Issue

Regardless Of Where Children Start In Life, Exposure To Lead Drags Their Trajectory Down

A new study finds that the effects of lead are long-lasting, and have a negative impact on social mobility as adults.

The Washington Post: Lead Exposure Alters The Trajectory Of Children’s Lives Decades Later, Study Finds

Children with elevated blood-lead levels at age 11 ended up as adults with lower cognitive function and lower-status occupations than their parents, according to new research that offers one of the clearest looks yet at the potential long-term health impact of the potent neurotoxin. (Dennis, 3/28)

NPR: Lead Exposure In Childhood May Blunt Thinking Skills For Decades

"It's toxic to many parts of the body, but in particular in can accumulate in the bloodstream and pass through the blood brain barrier to reach the brain," says the study's first author, Aaron Reuben, a graduate student in clinical psychology at Duke University. (Bichell, 3/28)

Kaiser Health News: Lead Poisoning’s Lifelong Toll Includes Lowering Social Mobility, Researchers Find

By the time study participants reached age 38, a pattern emerged: Children who were exposed to lead early in life had worse cognitive abilities, based on how their exposure level. The difference was statistically significant. They were also more likely to be worse off, socioeconomically, than those who had not been exposed to lead. The study found that no matter what the child’s IQ, the mother’s IQ, or the family’s social status, lead poisoning resulted in downward social mobility. That was largely thanks to cognitive decline, according to the research. (Luthra, 3/28)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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