F1000Research (Jul 2013)

Did the elimination of lead from petrol reduce crime in the USA in the 1990s? [v1; ref status: indexed, http://f1000r.es/1g5]

  • Wayne Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.2-156.v1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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This article assesses the evidence for the hypothesis that a decline in all types of crime since the early 1990s in the USA was an unintended consequence of removing lead from petrol between 1975 and 1985. It describes ecological and econometric studies that have generally but not always found correlations between lead exposures in childhood and some types of crime 20 years later; a small number of epidemiological studies that have found a dose-response relationship between lead exposure in childhood and self-reported and officially recorded criminal offences in young adulthood; and evidence for the biological plausibility of a causal relationship. The major anomaly in the evidence is that the associations reported in ecological studies are much stronger (explaining 56-90% of the variation in crime rates) than the weaker relationships found in the cohort studies (that typically explain less than 1% of the variance in offending). Suggestions are made for research that will better assess the contribution that reduced lead exposure has made to declining crime rates in the USA.

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