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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://tainguyenso.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/12998

Title: Environmental ecological modeling of human blood lead levels in East Asia
Authors: Niisoe T.
Harada K.H.
Hitomi T.
Watanabe T.
Hung N.N.
Ishikawa H.
Wang Z.
Koizumi A.
Keywords: 
Issue Date: 2011
Publisher: Environmental Science and Technology
Citation: Volume 45, Issue 7, Page 2856-2862
Abstract: Environmental ecological modeling (EEM), which unifies models simulating transport of chemicals and exposure of humans to chemicals, was used to simulate long-term trends of female adult human blood lead levels (BLLs) and historical exposure to the atmospheric lead in four East Asian countries: Japan, Korea, China, and Vietnam. Anthropogenic lead emissions to the atmosphere in Vietnam were estimated from energy statistics to be 1931 t yr-1. Calculated BLLs generally agreed with those observed in samples collected in these countries as the error factors were less than 2. The model results revealed that BLLs decreased significantly in Tokyo (by 58%) and Seoul (by 45%) in recent decades and confirmed the effects of efforts to reduce environmental lead in Japan and Korea. The model results also revealed that BLLs in Beijing did not decrease in this decade as much as in Tokyo and Seoul, despite the phasing out of leaded gasoline, and that the contribution from the atmospheric component was increasing (43% in 2009). Finally, we applied EEM to simulate BLLs of children in Hanoi. The probability of children having BLLs greater than 50 μg L -1 was 7.5%, which was greater than those observed in developed countries. © 2011 American Chemical Society.
URI: http://tainguyenso.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/12998
ISSN: 0013936X
Appears in Collections:New - Articles of Universities of Vietnam from Scopus

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