5.7μg/dL
IHME Global Burden of Disease, 2021
8,233,285,200
BMJ Global Health, 2025
Category | # of samples | Min Value (ppm) | Median (ppm) | Max Value (ppm) | % Above Ref. Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spices | 135 | ND | ND | 622 | 4% |
Ceramic Foodware | 31 | ND | 120 | 80,000 | 52% |
Metal Foodware | 63 | ND | 730 | 74,600 | 67% |
Plastic Foodware | 41 | ND | ND | 872 | 10% |
Cosmetics | 147 | ND | ND | 231 | 4% |
Toys | 102 | ND | ND | 97,300 | 23% |
Paints (Large Surface) | 65 | ND | ND | 164,000 | 34% |
Paints (Crafts, Arts, Specialty Use) | 12 | ND | ND | 1,616 | 17% |
Paints (Unclassified) | 24 | ND | 2,915 | 40,700 | 79% |
Staple Dry Food | 22 | ND | ND | ND | 0 |
Medicines | 7 | ND | ND | ND | 0 |
What's included:
Data Source: The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation's 2021 Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study.
Lead can be found in many consumer products, including paint, ceramic and metal cookware, spices, cosmetics, toys, and other items.
What's Included:
Data Sources:
Review national statistics, policy initiatives, and studies on lead exposure.
The cumulative population blood lead level (alternately 'Lead Burden Index'), combines average lead blood levels with population size. It can act as an indicator of gross intellectual impairment or cardiovascular disease. This metric can be used to estimate the burden of lead in different countries or regions, and between different source(s) of lead when known. The tool is instructive for donors, governments and United Nations agencies when comparing a range of interventions for viability or cost-effectiveness.
Data Source: Cumulative population blood lead levels, Fuller et al., BMJ Global Health, 2025