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The Link between Lead Poisoning and Crime

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  • The Link between Lead Poisoning and Crime

    Note - St. Louis consistently has some of the highest lead levels in Children

    Children in poor neighborhoods are often exposed to high levels of lead from old lead paint in dilapidated homes, new study shows.


    From USA Today -

    By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
    In what may be the strongest link yet between lead exposure and crime rates, researchers at the University of Cincinnati on Tuesday released new evidence, spanning more than 20 years, that draws a direct relationship between the amount of lead in a child's blood and the likelihood he or she will commit crimes as an adult.
    Research has shown before that lead has harmful effects on judgment, cognitive function and the ability to regulate behavior. But until now the best research focused on juveniles, not adults.
    Now, researchers have collected data from as early as 1979 when pregnant women and their healthy babies had their blood drawn regularly at four Cincinnati medical clinics. By the time the children were 7, researchers had a complete portrait of lead levels.
    Nearly two decades later, the researchers tracked down 250 of the subjects, ages 19-24. Controlling for a host of factors, including parental IQ, education, income and drug use, the team found that the more lead in a child's blood from birth through age 7, the more likely he or she was to be arrested as an adult. The tie between high lead levels and violent crime was particularly strong.
    "We need to be thinking about lead as a drug and a fairly strong one," says Kim Dietrich, a professor of environmental health at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and the principal investigator for the study in the journal Public Library of Science Medicine. "These kids have been exposed to this drug, chronically, since before birth."
    FIND MORE STORIES IN: Philadelphia | National Institutes of Health | Deborah Denno | Public Library of Science Medicine | University of Cincinnati College of Medicine | Rick Nevin
    For nearly 50 years, researchers have known about the relationship between children's impulsivity and high levels of lead in their bodies. As recently as 2007, economist Rick Nevin tied violent crime rates to historic use of leaded gasoline.
    Children in poor neighborhoods are often exposed to high levels of lead from old lead paint in dilapidated homes.
    Fordham University School of Law criminologist Deborah Denno, who has studied the effects of lead, calls the findings' ties to adult criminal behavior "very important." Denno studied National Institutes of Health statistics of nearly 1,000 children in Philadelphia and found that a high blood lead level at 7 years old was among the strongest predictors that a child would have both learning difficulties and disciplinary problems in school. High blood lead also strongly predicted whether a child would have a juvenile or adult criminal record.
    Denno says Tuesday's data are newer than hers by 20 years. "It's still a huge problem," she says, "and it's still a huge problem among African-American communities and poorer neighborhoods
    Turning the other cheek is better than burying the other body.

    Official Sport Lounge Sponsor of Rhode Island - Quincy Jones - Yadier Molina who knows no fear.
    God is stronger and the problem knows it.

    2017 BOTB bracket

  • #2
    At first glance, I'm just a bit skeptical of this.
    Make America Great For Once.

    Comment


    • #3
      Skeptical. Symptom, not the cause.

      Comment


      • #4
        Here is another link from the LA Times

        A new study finds that even low levels can permanently damage the brains of children.
        Turning the other cheek is better than burying the other body.

        Official Sport Lounge Sponsor of Rhode Island - Quincy Jones - Yadier Molina who knows no fear.
        God is stronger and the problem knows it.

        2017 BOTB bracket

        Comment


        • #5
          Reggie and Kev -

          I have done my own research - I can understand why you are skeptical.

          Trust me - its real - lead lowers the IQ and causes some mental instability as well.

          Rich white kids with similar exposure fair the same.
          Turning the other cheek is better than burying the other body.

          Official Sport Lounge Sponsor of Rhode Island - Quincy Jones - Yadier Molina who knows no fear.
          God is stronger and the problem knows it.

          2017 BOTB bracket

          Comment


          • #6
            Schwa,

            I'd like to see the stats during that same time period that shows the number of single mothers raising children with little or no help from the father.
            Make America Great For Once.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Schwahalala View Post
              Reggie and Kev -

              I have done my own research - I can understand why you are skeptical.

              Trust me - its real - lead lowers the IQ and causes some mental instability as well.

              Rich white kids with similar exposure fair the same.
              There's no question lead is serious business, but with half a dozen more likely factors staring you in the face, I'm not sure lead is really the culprit here.

              Comment


              • #8
                You guys really suspect single parenting alone has more to do with anti-social behavior than brain damage caused by environmental toxins?
                Damn these electric sex pants!

                26+31+34+42+44+46+64+67+82+06 = 10

                Bring back the death penalty for corporations!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Reggie Cleveland View Post
                  There's no question lead is serious business, but with half a dozen more likely factors staring you in the face, I'm not sure lead is really the culprit here.
                  Good point.

                  IMO, many unwed mothers are forced to live in less than ideal conditions becuase their baby's daddys lack the responsibility and accountability to give them something better.

                  Many of these factors are interlocked, but to put lead as the main cause is a bit simplistic.
                  Make America Great For Once.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Controlling for a host of factors, including parental IQ, education, income and drug use, the team found that the more lead in a child's blood from birth through age 7, the more likely he or she was to be arrested as an adult. The tie between high lead levels and violent crime was particularly strong.
                    .
                    Damn these electric sex pants!

                    26+31+34+42+44+46+64+67+82+06 = 10

                    Bring back the death penalty for corporations!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Here's the thing gentlemen.

                      Lead poisoning is some evil stuff.

                      My research shows it lead to the rise of biker gangs - always smelling the lead in gas in the 60's. Gang related violence in LA because of the smog and a host of other issues - far to detailed to get into now.

                      In fact - you can draw an IQ scale and see the dip when leaded gasoline was at its highest.
                      Turning the other cheek is better than burying the other body.

                      Official Sport Lounge Sponsor of Rhode Island - Quincy Jones - Yadier Molina who knows no fear.
                      God is stronger and the problem knows it.

                      2017 BOTB bracket

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Schwahalala View Post
                        Reggie and Kev -

                        I have done my own research - I can understand why you are skeptical.

                        Trust me - its real - lead lowers the IQ and causes some mental instability as well.

                        Rich white kids with similar exposure fair the same.
                        Thanks for the article, Schwa. I did not realize lead poisoning was still a problem in this country. There is no question environmental factors can have an adverse effect on human behavior. Technology has advanced so much in the last century that the problem is identifying the real affectors from the urban myths. Heavy metal exposure, especially lead, is a well known danger, though.
                        "I am for truth no matter who says it. I am for justice no matter who it is for or against."...Malcom X

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          So is there a poor neighborhood that has all the same variables as most every other poor neighborhood with the exception of the lead to compare? While it may be a component you'd think a bigger factor into growing up to be a criminal is growing up around other criminals.

                          Soon I'll be able to shoot up a Wal-Mart and blame it on all the Green Skittles I ate as a child.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            The controlling for other factors is precisely the part I'm skeptical about. You've got possibly/probably young, single mothers, drug use, lousy this, that, and the other, etc., etc., and it's lead paint that we should be most worried about?

                            Maybe mom should do a better job of preventing the kids from chewing on the windowsills?

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Reggie Cleveland View Post
                              There's no question lead is serious business, but with half a dozen more likely factors staring you in the face, I'm not sure lead is really the culprit here.
                              You could list half a dozen factors leading to the fall of the Roman Empire, too. Number 1 on that list would be the lead poisoning of the population. Lead was a technological marvel, at the time. It was pervasive in Roman culture. It was even used on food to enhance the flavor (hello, MSG).

                              The violent crime in Schwa's article is consistent with the violent behavior that became prevalent in Roman culture after lead exposure.
                              "I am for truth no matter who says it. I am for justice no matter who it is for or against."...Malcom X

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