Title: Lead and Mercury: Subtle Environmental Health Hazards
1Lead and MercurySubtle Environmental Health
Hazards
- For Introduction to Environmental Studies
- TESC January 8, 2003
- Dr. Jude Van Buren- DOH
- Office Director Environmental Health Assessment
2Overview of Workshop
- Lead Overview
- Slide show
- Mercury
- Fish Advisories in Washington State
- PBT (Persistent Biotoxins) Reduction
- Case Studies Minimata, Japan
- Gold mining in Brazil
3Objectives of Workshop
- To better understand the longevity and cycling of
heavy metals in the environment and animal
systems - To acquire a basic knowledge of how these metals
interact with animal tissue to cause adverse
health effects (lead mimics other cations in
organism mercury biotransforms and
bioconcentrates) - To recognize the complexity of environmental
hazards and their adverse health, economic and
social impacts - To assist in developing a framework for how to
address environmental issues
4What is lead poisoning?
- Considered to occur when a childs blood lead
exceeds 10ug lead per deciliter of blood (ug/dl) - Adverse health effects that result from exposure
to lead include deficits in intelligence, and
developmental and behavioral problems - It is a major, preventable pediatric
environmental health problem. - It is silent most children have no symptoms.
5Who is at risk?
- Infants young children
- Children living in older housing
- with chipping, peeling, flaking paint or
- where remodeling is taking place
- Low-income children
- Pregnant women are at risk
- because of the danger lead can pose to the
- unborn child
- Premature birth
- Low birth weight
-
6Primary Pathways
Ingestion Children absorb appx. 50 Adults
absorb appx.10 Inhalation Childrens
respiratory uptake can be up to 2.7 times
higher than adults.
7Statewide Prevalence Survey Results (1999)
Weighted Children No. percent tested
elev elev 95 CI WA
State 548 8 0.9 (0, 1.9) Rest of
state 209 1 0.5 (0, 1.4) Hispanics
in 273 6 3.8 (0, 7.8) High-risk
area The survey estimates that there are
1,400 one and two year old children in WA
State with elevated blood lead levels.
8Facts
There are children with lead poisoning in
Washington State. Lead-contaminated soil is a
potential exposure source. Even children who
seem healthy can have high levels of lead in
their bodies. Childhood lead poisoning is
preventable.
9DOH Lead Program
- DOH has been working on lead issues since 1992.
- Activities included
- Establish Lead Task Force
- Mandate lab reporting of blood lead levels
- Create Childhood Blood Lead Registry
- Conduct studies
- Provide education and outreach
- Conduct environmental investigations
- Work with steering committees on legislation
- Provide enhanced screening opportunities
10The Hazard called MercuryWashingtons Efforts
to Reduce Mercury in the Environment
- Mercury cycle
- Chemistry of mercury
- Exposure to mercury
- Adverse health effects of mercury
- How mercury accumulates in fish
- Fish Advisory efforts
- Mercury reduction efforts
11Mercury cycling in the environment
- Mercury is a natural element that enters the
environment from rock formations and volcanoes. - Mercury that enters environment eventually makes
its way into the air, water and food - EPA estimates that the amount of mercury entering
environment has increased fivefold due to coal
burning power plants, waste incinerators, common
consumer products such as fluorescent lights,
thermostats, thermometers, dental amalgams
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13Exposure to Mercury
- Human beings are exposed to mercury via 3 routes
- Eating certain long-lived, predatory fish that
have accumulated mercury in their tissues via the
food web - Inhaling mercury from liquid mercury spills
(enclosed spaces and somewhat from mercury
amalgams) - Skin absorption through contact with liquid
mercury or creams containing mercury
14Exposure to Mercury Vapor
- Mercury spills in an enclosed space can evaporate
and reach exposure levels high enough to cause
health effects even from short term exposure (eg
thermometers, blood pressure cuffs, jewelry
thermostats and switches) - Note mercury in outdoor air (and atmospheric) is
generally not at concentrations high enough to
cause adverse health effects
15How Mercury accumulates in fish most common
exposure source for mercury in humans
- Elemental mercury (Hg) from earths crust is
released into the environment from anthropoegenic
activities and volcanoes. - Mercuric Chloride or mercurous chloride
- (Hg 2 or Hg2 2 from laboratory or medicinal
sources (thus far all species are inorganic) - Ethyl (CH3 Hg) or methyl (CH3-Hg-CH3) mercury
is formed in GI tract or in sediments by
micro-organisms that can methylate mercury now
it is organic and bioavailable
16Toxicity of mercury As Lipophilic (fat-loving)
characterstics increase toxicity increases
- CH3-Hg-CH3) Hg 2 or Hg2 2 Hg
- Monomethyl mercuric or mercurous
elemental - Or dimethyl mercury mercury
- Mercury
- 90-95 absorbed 7 absorbed .01
- absorbed
- Fetus and developing child
- Absorb this form easier
- Than adults
17Adverse health effects of mercury
- Level of toxic effects depends on the route and
amount of exposure and who the person is - Neurotoxicant affects central nervous system
especially in fetus and infants when nervous
system is still developing - Cardiovascular system toxicant especially for
adults - Note It takes weeks or months before effects
are detectable after the adult has been exposed
18Populations at greatest risk for Mercury
- Mercury is especially hazardous to pregnant women
and children - Mercury can cross the placental barrier and can
pass to the nursing child via breast milk. - CDC estimates that 1 in 10 women of childbearing
age is exposed to mercury at levels above that
harm could occur - NAS study (2000) estimated that 60,000 infants a
year face increased risk of brain damage because
pregnant moms had elevated body burden of mercury
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20Fish Advisories
- Currently Washington has 13 local fish advisories
issued across the state due to elevated levels of
various contaminants. - e.g. mercury in bass and perch in Lake Whatcom.
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23Fish Advisories
- Numbers do not reflect the extent of
contamination, but rather the level at which
states have looked. - Ecologys potentially Bioaccumulative Toxins
(PBT) program is expanding the number of
contaminants, water bodies, and fish to be tested
for. - Testing for contaminants will likely expand the
number of fish advisories.
24Fish Advisories
- Statewide advisory for mercury in canned tuna
expands the list of commercial fish listed by FDA
- Note - recent FDA panel recommended advice
similar to DOHs with regard to canned tuna. - Specific advice given to WIC (Women, Infants and
Children Supplemental Food Programs
25Issue Summary Fish Advisories
- Women of Childbearing Age Children Under 6
- General
- Do not eat any shark, swordfish, tilefish, king
mackerel or either fresh caught or frozen tuna
steaks. - Limit canned tuna, based on bodyweight. (Women
weighing 135 pounds or more should eat no more
than 1 can (6oz) per week Child
eat no more than ½ can (3oz) per week) - Specific
- Duwamish River, Eagle Harbor, Lake Roosevelt,
Lake Whatcom, Sinclair Inlet
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27Advice on consuming fish from the Duwamish River
- Eat no more than one meal per month of any
combination of bottomfish (English sole, starry
flounder) or pelagic fish (perch) from the
Duwamish, or rockfish from Elliott Bay - Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are elevated in
fish that live year-round in the Duwamish River
(not salmon) - Pregnant women or those considering pregnancy
should pay special attention to the advisory
English sole
Rockfish
Flounder
Perch
28Advice on consuming fish from the Duwamish River
- Do not eat the hepatopancreas of crabs
- Shellfish advisories already exist.
- Avoid eating shellfish from the Duwamish (and the
majority of King County coastline due to
potential chemical and biological contamination)
29- Simplified fact sheet translated into Laotian.
This same flyer was also translated into
Vietnamese, Cambodian, Hmong, Russian and
Spanish. - These flyers serve as an aid while providing our
message in person at community meetings. - A more detailed fact sheet (English and Spanish)
was sent by mail to a wider audience.
30Washingtons Response to Mercury Mercury Chemical
Action Plan
- Goals 1)Virtual elimination of use and release
of anthropogenic (human caused) mercury - 2)Minimize human exposure to anthropogenic
mercury - Recommendations
- Ongoing, planned, and proposed
- Short-term, mid-term, and long-term
31Reduction Plan Process 2002 Legislative
Direction
- develop a planned strategy for the reduction of
mercury from the environment. - Involve advisory committee in plan development
with balanced representation - Issue draft plan for 60-days public comment
- Finalize plan by end of 2002
32Mercury Action Plan Advisory Committee
- Local Government
- King County
- City of Tacoma
- Southwest Clean Air Agency
- Public Health
- Whatcom County Health Dept.
- Yakima County Health District
- Inst. Of Neurotoxicology
- Community Groups
- Physicians for Social Responsibility
- WashPIRG
- Environmental Groups
- People for Puget Sound
- WA Toxics Coalition
- WA Wilderness Recreation Coalition
-
- Agriculture
- General Agriculture
- Fishing Industry
- Business
- Dental
- Medical
- Mining
- Recycling
- Retail/Manufacturing
- Private Utilities
- Crematoria
- Small Businesses
- Auto Manufacturers
33HighlightsEst. Hg in Products Disposed of in
WA Annually
34Highlights Completed Ongoing Hg Reductions
- Replaced Mercury Dairy Manometers in WA
- "Fish Facts for Good Health" brochure for Women,
Infant and Child (WIC) Program - Automobile Light Switches in State Vehicles
- Local Toxics Control Account Grants awarded to
local governments - Developing Letter to all Ob-Gyn and Pediatricians
on benefits of eating fish and mercury in fish - Hospital mercury workshops planned
- Working with Washington State Dental Association
to assure proper disposal of dental amalgam - Working with WA Poison Control Center on Mercury
Cleanup Brochure
35Ongoing Work on Mercury Reductions
- Research and Monitoring of Mercury
- Mercury fish screening survey (Jun-Dec 2002)
Public Awareness Survey - Landfill Gas Study
- Education and Outreach
- Information sharing WA Quicksilver Review,
publications, meetings/presentations. - Incorporate DOH community competent practice
/experience for statewide fish advisory for
mercury. - Propose community involvement in action
thermometer exchange, auto switch exchange,
recycling, information sharing. - Ecology and Health web sites updated/ refined.
36Mercury Issue Summary
- Neurotoxin can damage brain, lung, kidneys,
liver - Fetus and young children at greatest risk
- Consumption of contaminated fish most common
route of exposure - Reduction efforts at international, national,
state and local levels