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THE ENVIRONMENTAL CAUSES OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES
Christopher Williams (UK)
Introduction:
Millions of people now experience intellectual decline because
of human-caused environmental change. Logically, protecting our
intelligence should be a policy priority, but it is not. This
study provides the first global assessment of Environmentally-Mediated
Intellectual Decline (EMID) (Williams 1997).
Environmental medicine gives inadequate attention to the brain,
concentrating on cancer and respiratory ailments which are simpler
to diagnose and cure.
Priorities set by rich countries lead to an incomplete picture.
Initiatives within the US Decade of the Brain largely concern
neurotoxic environmental agents, such as lead, radiation, or PCBs
(polychlorinated biphenyls). This omits the perspective of less
wealthy nations - the dietary absence of vital environmental micro-nutrients
such as iron and iodine.
There are no comprehensive statistics for EMID. There are figures
concerning lead, PCBs, and micronutrient deficiencies, but it
is not known if these figures describe the same or different people.
Risk-assessment is inadequate, creating an 'ignorance = safe'
ethos.
An awakened concern:
The US Congress declared the 1990s The Decade of the Brain.
The Congress Office of Technology Assessment produced key reports
which claimed that environmental medicine had for too long concentrated
on cancer, and ignored impacts on the brain, including dementia.
The US National Research Council (NRC), marked a new medical discipline
in the title of its report, 'Environmental Neurotoxicology', which
expressed serious concern about the shortcomings of traditional
risk assessment techniques when applied to the brain (National
Research Council 1992).
While the US was concerned about the presence of hazardous environmental
agents, UNICEF and the World Health Organisation (WHO) were addressing
the absence, in poorer regions, of environmental micronutrients
necessary for brain development (UNICEF 1994). Protein Energy
Malnutrition (PEM) affects the intellectual ability of a third
of all poor-nation children. This 'hidden hunger' often stems
from land degradation and forest depletion compounded by population
pressure. Improved literacy reduces population growth. But intellectual
decline reduces literacy; thus increasing population and precipitating
a regressive spiral.
The Decade of the Brain has seen these two parallel concerns.
But because they reflect the rich-nation poor-nation divide, they
have not been viewed together.
The full extent of EMID: The evidence
jigsaw
Chemical factors:
Lead pollution and iodine deficiency are well-known causes of
EMID, but there are many others (Barten 1992; and see Paul 1993;
Grandjean and Landrigan 2006). For example, new evidence about
hormone-disrupting chemicals (e.g. PCBs) emerged in 1996 (Colburn
1996).This could surpass the significance of lead, because these
chemicals are persistent and there is no clinical treatment. In
1989, the impact of radiation on human intelligence was affirmed
by the release of data concerning the A-bomb survivors in Japan
(National Research Council 1990). Recent research links radiation
releases from Chernobyl, Windscale and weapons testing with Downs
Syndrome (Holowinsky 1993). Careless use of pesticides in agriculture
and fish-farming is shown to have caused intellectual disabilities
(Creizel et al. 1993).
The incidence of intellectual disabilities in polluted Soviet
cities has increased twice as fast as in rural areas (Feshbach
and Friendly 1992).
In Poland and the Czech Republic pollution has doubled the number
of children needing special education, and halved the number of
'exceptionally gifted' children (Seligsohn 1994).
(For sources, see Further Reading).
Malnutrition:
Malnutrition has been an accepted cause of intellectual decline
since the 1970s. More recent research concerning Protein Energy
Malnutrition (PEM), and interrelated social factors, provides
better understandings of 'sub-clinical' problems resulting from
poor quality food (Waterlow 1993). High-yield 'Green Revolution'
crops were introduced in poorer countries in the 1960s to overcome
famine. But these are now blamed for causing intellectual deficits
because they do not take up essential micronutrients. They have
also displaced other nutritious indigenous food sources. In addition,
UNICEF has found that the exclusive use of breast milk substitutes
causes an IQ deficit of eight points (average IQ=100) (UNICEF
1993).
Cures are self-defeating. Poland uses crop varieties that take
up less heavy metal from contaminated soils, but these varieties
also take up less essential minerals. Resultant deficiencies can
cause intellectual impairments directly and synergistically by
increasing the human uptake of toxins from other sources (Seymour
1996).
Sub-clinical impacts:
'Clinical' outcomes (observable disability which can be traced
to particular causes) are often indicative of much broader 'sub-clinical'
impacts. In the 1970s, Herbert Needleman studied the sub-clinical
impacts of lead in 3000 US children (Needleman et al. 1979). This
revealed a strong link between high body-burdens of lead, and
behavioural and intellectual difficulties recorded by teachers.
In a follow-up study in 1988, Needleman found that the same children
had displayed higher drop-out rates, lower class standing, increased
absenteeism, and lower vocabulary and grammatical reasoning scores
(Needleman et al. 1990).
There is no comprehensive statistical
profile of EMID, but the following provides information gathered
some ten years ago (Williams 1997: 18-27):
| Lead
Pollution |
May
impair intelligence in:
|
| |
10%
of poor Parisian children |
| |
17% of children
in the US
|
| |
25% in Mexico City
|
| |
60% in Managua
|
| |
90% in some African
cities
|
| |
|
| Exposure to PCBs in
breast milk |
Could affect 5%
of US babies
|
| |
|
| Iodine Deficiency Disorders
(IDD) |
1.6 billion at
risk globally
|
| |
In China, reduces
IQ levels by 10-15 points in 8 million people
|
| |
In Bhutan, affects
22% of the population
|
| |
|
| Green Revolution iron
deficiency |
Affects 1.5 billion
|
| Iron deficiency
- affects the learning ability of: |
56% of Indian school
children
|
| |
|
| Polluted
water in North India |
Affects the IQ
of 40% in some villages
|
| |
|
| Protein-energy malnutrition
(PEM) |
>Affects a third
of all poor-nation children
|
Costs and consequences:
In 1985, a US Congress study claimed that reducing the neurotoxic
effects of lead on children would create a 'health benefit' of
more than $100 million per annum (OTA 1990). Reducing lead from
tap water from 50 to 20 grams per litre would save $27.6 million
in medical care and $81 million in special education. The World
Bank states that iron, vitamin A and iodine deficiencies reduce
the Gross Domestic Product of developing countries by 5% (Seymour
1996).
Research in Ecuador found that when iodine deficiency causes average
IQ to fall from 100 to 79 in a community, income halves (Correa
1980). The non-cash costs are also important. In communities where
superstition prevails, a child born with an intellectual disability
may spoil marriage opportunities for siblings and be seen as a
punishment for a wrongdoing by the parents.
Risk assessment:
Environmental health priorities have stemmed from the 'easiest'
science - visible outcomes such as cancer and respiratory ailments.
Risk-assessment in relation to the brain is uniquely difficult.
Only 10 per cent of the 70,000 commercially-used chemicals have
been tested at all for neurotoxicity, 'and only a handful have
been evaluated thoroughly' (National Research Council 1992). And
assessments fail to account for interactions between chemicals.
In Russian roulette, the revolver with one bullet represents a
1 in 6 risk. Under current EMID risk-assessment conceptualisations,
if you don't know whether or not the gun is loaded, the result
of the so-called risk assessment is 'safe'.
Assessment of toxicity in humans uses a rich-nation 'average human'
model, which is often far from 'average' and sometimes far from
'human' (based on the white, young, well-fed, well-housed, male
mouse). Although an uncertainty factor is added, this is just
a guess which ignores known vulnerabilities.
As a result, so-called 'safe levels' for exposure to neurotoxins
differ significantly between countries. Why is the UK standard
for lead in tap water five times less strict than the WHO standard?
Other figures for lead could imply that the UK brain is 17 times
more robust than that of Americans - or 17 times less valuable
(Wilson 1983).
The key implications are:
- Policy-makers should recognise the existence of environmentally-mediated
intellectual decline. Not least, there is a need for greater
acceptance of, and support for, people who have intellectual
difficulties.
- Preventive environmental health policy should prioritise the
brain, because it is the most vulnerable and valuable human
asset. As a double dividend, better standards would provide
benefits in other areas.
- The costs for education and health services, and a nation's
intellectual resources, mean that EMID needs to be central to
environmental management and risk assessment.
With the global population set to double in forty years, it seems
reasonable to claim that we will all survive better if the potential
of our intellectual resources is maintained at an optimum level.
The prognosis is that this potential is under threat.
Further Reading
Grandjean, P. and Landrigan, P. J. (2006) Developmental neurotoxicology
of industrial chemicals. The Lancet 368 (9553), 2167-2178.
National Research Council (1992) Environmental neurotoxicology.
Washington DC: National Academies Press.
Paul, M. (ed) (1993) Occupational and environmental reproductive
hazards: a guide for clinicians. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins.
Williams, C. (1997) Terminus brain: the environmental threats
to human intelligence, Cassell: London.
WWF-UK (2004) Compromising our children: chemical impacts on children's
intelligence and behaviour. (Download
PDF)
References
Barten, F. (1992) Environmental lead exposure of children
in Managua, Nicaragua: an urban health problem. The Hague: CIP-Gegevens
Koninklijke Bibliotheck.
Colburn, T. (1996) Our stolen future. New York: Dutton, Penguin.
Correa, H. (1980) 'A cost-benefit study of Iodine supplementation
programmes for the prevention of endemic goitre and cretinism'
in J. B. Stanbury and B. S. Hertzel, (1980) Endemic goitre and
cretinism: Iodine nutrition in health and disease, John Wiley:
New York.
Czeizel, A. E, Elek, C., Gundy, S., Metneki, J., Nemes, E. et.
al. (1993) Environmental trichlorfon and a cluster of congenital
abnormalitites. The Lancet, 341, 539-42.
Feshbach, M. and Friendly, A. (1992) Ecocide in the USSR: health
and nature under siege. London: Basic Books.
Global Security Programme (nd) Environmentally-mediated intellectual
decline (EMID): a selected interdisciplinary bibliography. Cambridge:
University of Cambridge.
Grandjean, P. and Landrigan, P. J. (2006) Developmental neurotoxicology
of industrial chemicals. The Lancet 368 (9553), 2167-2178.
Holowinsky, I. Z. (1993) Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe and the
high risk potential for mental retardation. Mental Retardation,
31 (1), 35-40.
National Research Council (2006) Health effects of exposure to
low levels of ionizing radiation (BEIR VII). Washington DC: National
Academies Press.
National Research Council (1992) Environmental neurotoxicology.
Washington DC: National Academies Press.
Needleman, H., Schell, A., Bellinger, D., Leviton, A. and Allred,
E. N. (1990) 'The long-term effects of exposure to low doses of
lead in childhood: an 11-year follow-up report' New England
Journal of Medicine, 322 (2), 83-8.
Office of Technology Assessment (1990) Neurotoxicology: identifying
and controlling poisons in the nervous system OTA-BA-436. Washington
DC: US Government Printing Office.
Paul, M. (ed) (1993) Occupational and environmental reproductive
hazards: a guide for clinicians. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins.
Rogan, W. J. and Gladen, B.C. (1993) 'Breast feeding and cognitive
development'. Early Human Development, 31, 181-93.
Seligsohn, D. (1994) 'Insidious poisoner at home', The European,
4-10 February, 16.
Seymour, J. (1996) 'Hungry for a new revolution'. New Scientist,
2023, 32-7.
UNICEF (1993) Global child health 1(2), 1.
UNICEF (1994) Annual report. New York: UNICEF.
Waterlow, J.C. (1993) Protein-energy Malnutrition. New York:
Hodder Arnold.
Williams, C. (1997) Terminus brain: the environmental threats
to human intelligence, Cassell: London.
Wilson, D. (1983) The lead scandal: the fight to save children
from damage by lead in petrol. London: Ashgate.
| Article updated April 2007 |
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