“We’ve shifted the curve in the population for mental health problems, so that
everyone has a greater liability in the mental illness symptoms, and that some
people who were already at risk are going to develop diagnosable disorders
sooner, more often or more kinds,” said coauthor of the study Dr. Aaron Reuben,
assistant professor of clinical neuropsychology at the University of Virginia.
The study published Wednesday in The Journal of Child Psychology and
Psychiatry estimates that about 151 million mental disorder diagnoses in the US
are attributable to lead. The exposure likely would not have happened had lead
not been in gasoline, Reuben added…
“Millions of Americans are walking around with an unknown, invisible history of
lead exposure that has likely influenced for the worse how they think, feel and
behave.”
Lead is a potent neurotoxin and can disrupt brain development in many ways that
can impact most types of mental health problems, including anxiety, depression
and ADHD…
“It also changed personalities. We believe that (lead exposure) makes people a
little less conscientious –– so less well organized, less detail-oriented, less likely to
be able to pursue their goals in an organized way, and more neurotic,” Reuben
added.
“A new study estimates that childhood lead exposure, peaking between 1960 and
1990 due to leaded gasoline, caused 151 million excess cases of mental illness by
2015. Researchers linked historic lead exposure data to mental health symptoms,
finding that personality changes and mental health disorders were most
pronounced among Generation X.