Symanski Elaine, Whitworth Kristina W, Han Inkyu, Rammah Amal, Alvarez Juan, Moussa Iman, An Han Heyreoun, Flores Juan
Center for Precision Environmental Health and Departments of Medicine and Family and Community Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
Center for Precision Environmental Health and Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
Environ Justice. 2024 Apr;17(2):128-142. doi: 10.1089/env.2022.0023. Epub 2024 Apr 19.
Children living in environmental justice (EJ) neighborhoods may be vulnerable to metal exposure from industrial facilities that are located near their homes.
Working with community partners, we held 20 recruitment events and invited children aged 5-12 and their parents living in EJ communities in Houston to participate in an environmental health study. Parents completed a questionnaire about their child's diet and behaviors and urine samples were collected from children to evaluate their metal exposure.
During a 4-month period, we recruited 52 out of 67 (78%) eligible parent/child dyads with 96% of children providing urine samples and 90% of questionnaires complete except for data on children's height and weight. While urinary metal concentrations in our study population were generally similar compared with children aged 6-11 years in the 2015-2016 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, we observed higher levels among children who frequently ate Mexican candy, rice, or red meat, spent more time outdoors, played with cosmetics, had metal piercings, or lived in a home with smokers or where pesticides were used.
Our study was successful in recruiting children in EJ communities for the purpose of assessing urinary metal exposure and obtaining questionnaire data from parents to examine the potential sources of exposure. Except for chromium and cobalt, 14 metals were detected in more than half of children's urine samples. We identified potential key determinants of exposure in this population that should be further examined.
Findings point to the need for adequately powered studies among potentially vulnerable children living in EJ communities to profile metal exposures and identify important sources of these exposures.
生活在环境正义(EJ)社区的儿童可能容易受到其家附近工业设施金属暴露的影响。
我们与社区合作伙伴合作,举办了20场招募活动,邀请居住在休斯顿EJ社区的5至12岁儿童及其父母参与一项环境卫生研究。父母填写了一份关于其孩子饮食和行为的问卷,并收集了孩子的尿液样本以评估他们的金属暴露情况。
在4个月的时间里,我们从67对符合条件的亲子对中招募了52对(78%),96%的儿童提供了尿液样本,90%的问卷填写完整,但儿童身高和体重数据除外。虽然我们研究人群中的尿金属浓度与2015 - 2016年国家健康和营养检查调查中6至11岁儿童的总体情况相似,但我们观察到,经常食用墨西哥糖果、米饭或红肉、在户外待的时间更长、玩化妆品、有金属穿孔、或生活在有吸烟者或使用杀虫剂家庭中的儿童,其金属浓度更高。
我们的研究成功招募了EJ社区的儿童,以评估尿金属暴露情况,并从父母那里获取问卷数据,以检查潜在的暴露源。除铬和钴外,超过一半儿童的尿液样本中检测出14种金属。我们确定了该人群中潜在的关键暴露决定因素,应进一步进行研究。
研究结果表明,有必要对生活在EJ社区的潜在脆弱儿童进行有足够样本量的研究,以分析金属暴露情况并确定这些暴露的重要来源。