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Lead Exposure Drove a Hidden Mental Health Crisis in the U.S., Study Reveals + More

 

 

Lead Exposure Drove a Hidden Mental Health Crisis in the U.S., Study Reveals

Gizmodo reported:

The toxic metal lead has cast a long shadow on our collective well-being. A new study published Wednesday shows that lead exposure during the 20th century significantly worsened Americans’ brain health, likely helping cause many more cases of mental illness that otherwise would have never happened.

Scientists at Duke University and Florida State University conducted the study, building on their past research of lead’s impact on our health. They estimated that childhood lead exposure — particularly during the decades when it was most found in gasoline — has directly contributed to 151 million more cases of psychiatric disorder among Americans over the past 75 years. The findings indicate that lead has been even more dangerous to humanity than we knew.

Car manufacturers began to add lead to gasoline in the 1920s, aiming to reduce wear and tear on the engines. Leaded gasoline eventually became Americans’ single largest source of lead exposure, reaching a peak during the 1960s. But while scientists had long known that heavy lead exposure was bad for us, it became firmly established by the 1970s that even small amounts of lead could be harmful, especially to the brains of developing children.

Nearly One in Five US Teens Experienced Depression Last Year

ZeroHedge reported:

As Statista’s Anna Fleck reports, the topic has been reignited by the release of a new book titled The Anxious Generation, by New York University social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, who links the rise in mental health illness directly to the proliferation of social networks and smartphones. While Haidt writes that social media and smartphones are not the only causes of the mental health epidemic seen in several countries, he points to how such technologies are hindering children’s healthy development by reducing their time spent playing with friends in real life, eating into time for sleeping, as well as corroding their self esteem.

Even children who do not use social media are struggling, he argues, due to the changes brought about to social life. Critics say, however, that correlation is not the same as causation and that the data does not show a complete picture. As the following chart shows, the share of U.S. 12-17 year olds having experienced a depressive episode in the past year has risen from 7.9% in 2006 to 18.1% in 2023.

Exposure to Air Pollution Increases Infertility Risk, US Study Finds

Guardian reported:

Maternal and paternal exposure to common air pollutants may increase the risk of infertility because it can be detrimental to egg, sperm and embryo development, new research in the U.S. finds. Previous papers have established that air pollution exposure probably contributes to infertility, but it has been unclear whether the toxins affected men or women because both parents face similar exposures. That also made it difficult to establish when in the conception process damage occurred…

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (childrenshealthdefense.org)

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