Title: Environmental Injustice: Focus on Pediatric Neurodevelopmental Disorders
1Environmental InjusticeFocus on Pediatric
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
AAIDD Toxic Exposures and Developmental
Disabilities Environmental Health Lecture
Series March 11, 2008
- Lawrence D. Rosen, MD
- Chair, Integrative Pediatrics Council
- lrosen_at_integrativepeds.org
2The State of Childrens Health
- Cancer
- Prematurity
- Asthma/allergies
- Obesity/Diabetes
- Neurodevelopmental and Mental Health Disorders
3Epidemiology
- 1/150 in US with ASD
- 1/100 in NJ with ASD
- 1/60 boys in NJ with ASD
- 1/12 in US with ADHD
- 1/6 with neurodevelopmental disorder
- Sharp increases also seen for depression, bipolar
disorder, anxiety
4Children as a priority
- The health of our children is one of the most
important investments we can make and should be
among our top priorities. - -The Childrens Environmental Health Network
- The true measure of a nations standing is how
well it attends to its children their health
and safety, their material security, their
education and socialization, and their sense of
being loved, valued, and included in the families
and societies into which they are born. - - UNICEF, Child poverty in perspective An
overview of child well-being in rich countries,
Innocenti Report Card 7, 2007
5How are we doing?
6Environmental Injustice
- Environmental Justice is the fair treatment and
meaningful involvement of all people regardless
of race, color, national origin, or income with
respect to the development, implementation, and
enforcement of environmental laws, regulations,
and policies. (U.S. EPA) - Injustice is done when there exist health
disparities based on these same factors.
7Why Children?
- Children are not little adults - CHE LDDI
statement, November 2007 - Neuroendocrine/immune development
- Differences in exposure to environmental toxins
- Doubly exposed (pre- and postnatal)
- Differences in excretion
- No political voice
8The most vulnerable of the vulnerable
- Many of the children who are most heavily
exposed in our society to environmental toxins
are the same children who are poor, the same
children who have either no access or inadequate
access to medical care. - - Dr. Philip Landrigan
9CHE LDDI Scientific Consensus Statement
10Environmental Triggers
- Genetic/Epigenetic Interaction
- Timing (prenatal and postnatal)
- Mixtures/multiple exposures
- List of potential stressors
- Malnutrition
- Stress
- Infections, ant-infectives, vaccines
- Toxins (air, land, water)
11Host Factors
12The Iceberg Model
PHENOMICS
METABOLOMICS
PROTEOMICS
GENOMICS
13Specific Examples
- Lead
- Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
- Nutrition
- Stress
14Lead
- Even very low levels a/w ND differences
- BLLs gt5 mcg/dL among 1- to 5-year-old children
was 25.6 - BLLs gt5 mcg/dL
- 46.8 of non-Hispanic black children
- 27.9 of Mexican American children
- 18.7 of non-Hispanic white children
- Older housing and poverty is greater risk
- Compared with non-Hispanic white children,
non-Hispanic black children were 3 times more
likely to have a BLL 5-10 mcg/dl, 7 times more
likely to have a BLL of 10-20 mcg/dL, and 13.5
times more likely to have a BLL gt20 mcg/dL
Bernard SM, McGeehin MA Pediatrics 2003. Review
of Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey, 1988-1994.
15PCBs
- PCB exposure affects development (multiple
sources in LDDI statement) - Native American children at high risk
multigenerational exposure - The most notable finding was the significant
negative relationship between PCB levels and two
separate measures of long term memory. There was
also a negative relationship with a measure of
comprehension and knowledge. - - Newman et al PCBs and cognitive functioning
of Mohawk adolescents. Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2006
16PAHs
- Long known as carcinogens, more recently
recognized as neurotoxic - Children gt risk due to inhalation
- Inner city gt exposure
- Prenatal exposure affects neurodevelopment
(Perera NYC studies) - High prenatal exposure to PAHs was associated
with lower mental development index at age 3 - The odds of cognitive developmental delay were
also significantly greater for children with high
prenatal exposure
17Malnutrition
- Iron
- Zinc/Copper
- Vitamin D
- Essential fatty acids (omega 3s)
18Stress of Poverty
- Multiple stressors (financial, social)
- Increased rates of maternal depression
- Alters neurohormones
- Dr. Martha Farah (Center for Cognitive
Neuroscience, U-Penn) Stress is Neurotoxic
19Conclusions
- Focus on childrens health
- Paradigm shift
- Focus on wellness and prevention
- Precautionary principle
- Interdisciplinary dialogue
20References/Resources
- Rosen LD, Imus D Environmental injustice
children's health disparities and the role of the
environment. Explore (NY). 2007
Sep-Oct3(5)524-8. - CHEs LDDI Scientific Consensus Statement on
Environmental Agents Associated with
Neurodevelopmental Disorders www.healthandenviron
ment.org - Integrative Pediatrics Council
www.integrativepeds.org, see for more web
resources
21Environmental InjusticeFocus on Pediatric
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
AAIDD Toxic Exposures and Developmental
Disabilities Environmental Health Lecture
Series March 11, 2008
- Lawrence D. Rosen, MD
- Chair, Integrative Pediatrics Council
- lrosen_at_integrativepeds.org