Discover Food (May 2024)

X-ray screening of donated wild game is insufficient to protect children from lead exposure

  • Eric J. Buenz,
  • Gareth J. Parry,
  • Simon Hunter,
  • Garret M. Powell,
  • Dominik Berghamer,
  • Ellen Cieraad,
  • Jordan O. Hampton,
  • Jon M. Arnemo,
  • Brent A. Bauer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s44187-024-00104-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Worldwide hunters distribute game meat as a gesture of community bonding and as an essential nutritional resource for those facing food insecurity, especially among children and adolescents. Nonetheless, the risk of lead (Pb) contamination from lead-based bullets is not widely acknowledged. Although medical radiography (X-ray) is the standard method to detect lead in meat donations, its efficacy in conclusively identifying lead contamination in game meat samples remains unknown. To address this deficiency, hunters-provided game meat samples were analyzed using both X-ray and inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). By ICP-MS, 48% of these samples contained lead levels exceeding the daily intake benchmarks for children, including the samples in which no lead was identified by X-ray screening. This finding means that food insecure individuals need to make an unenviable decision between risking lead exposure in donated meat or forgoing a potentially critical food source.

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