September 19, 2006
About a third of attention deficit cases in American children may stem from smoking by pregnant mothers or exposure to lead after birth, according to a national study to be released today.
The study, which analyzed data on nearly 4,000 U.S. children ages 4 to 15, found that environmental factors such as smoking and lead have a strong link to Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, or ADHD, a behavioral condition that can permanently affect how children learn.
While lead exposure has long been linked to ADHD, the study found that levels of exposure far below government standards can put children at risk.
The study was to be published online today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives. Its lead authors are from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
Local doctors and advocates responded strongly to its general findings. "It's one of the first studies I've heard of that's found this," said Judith Weisel of Northern New Jersey Maternal/Child Health Consortium, a publicly funded group. "It's a tremendous number of people who are affected by this."
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