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by lazide 972 days ago
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/lead-poisonin...

Do you even see it in the list?

This NIH study shows it as ‘small, but significant’ - accounting for anywhere from 2.1-4.4% of the lead found in children’s blood near piston airports.

https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/10.1289/ehp.1003231

Less than 5% of the amount of lead total in their blood from that source, literally for the highest risk segment you can find. Even if completely eliminated, the other 95% isn’t going anywhere.

Even if you don’t average it out across the population, it’s hard to argue that isn’t so close to zero that nearly any significant benefit anywhere else would make it not a rush.

Most airborne lead pollution now is industrial anyway, and that is clearly the calculus there. As is the #1 and #2 sources of lead ingestion for children, old paint and old pipes.

I’m glad they’re getting rid of it, but I’m not going to complain they didn’t drop everything to rush it. Especially since if they did, they’d almost certainly kill more people in the resulting plane crashes.