City
Epaper

Pakistan's children facing serious health risks with Lead exposure

By IANS | Updated: May 3, 2026 20:10 IST

Islamabad, May 3 Lead was found in the blood of four in 10 children aged 12-36 months living ...

Open in App

Islamabad, May 3 Lead was found in the blood of four in 10 children aged 12-36 months living in seven high-risk areas of Pakistan, according to a new study by the Ministry of National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination, and UNICEF.

The UNICEF stated that lead exposure can stunt growth, cause anaemia, and weaken the immune system, while also lowering IQ, reducing attention span, and impairing memory, raising the risk of learning difficulties and behavioural problems.

"Several likely sources of exposure, including industrial emissions, informal battery recycling, lead-based paints, contaminated food and spices, and traditional cosmetics", were identified by the study based on global evidence.

According to the press release by the UNICEF, 2,100 children were sampled for the study who are living in Haripur, Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta, and Rawalpindi, the high-risk industrial areas.

It highlighted that 88 per cent of children tested from Hattar and Haripur had high levels of lead in their blood, making them the most affected, compared to one per cent in children living in Islamabad.

With up to eight in 10 children in Pakistan potentially affected, which makes the highest rates globally, the burden may be far higher as reduced learning ability through lead exposure is linked to long-term economic losses, estimated at 6-8 per cent of Pakistan’s GDP ($25-35 billion annually), it added.

"Children can absorb up to five times more lead than adults, making them especially vulnerable. Lead affects every system in the body, but its impact on developing brains can be devastating and lifelong. There is no safe level of exposure to lead for children whose harmful effects are irreversible," UNICEF Representative in Pakistan, Pernille Ironside, said.

According to the UNICEF, a nationally representative survey is planned later in 2026 to strengthen the evidence base and to assess lead exposure among children, pregnant women, and the most vulnerable groups.

Abdullah Fadil, Director, Partnership for a Lead-Free Future, said: "Lead poisoning is one of the most preventable threats to child health and development. The evidence is clear that it has lifelong consequences for learning and productivity."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalHigh turnout points to political realignment in four key states' results

PoliticsFinal Countdown Begins: India Awaits Verdict in High-Stakes Five-State Assembly Elections

InternationalThousands Evacuate As Volcano Erupts in Philippines

Cricket"Wins are very important": Raghuvanshi hopes KKR can continue winning momentum after win over SRH

TennisJannik Sinner defeats Alexander Zverev in straight sets to win Madrid Open

Health Realted Stories

HealthBanned reusable syringes available in Pakistan despite rise in hepatitis cases: Report

HealthSamsung Biologics labour union to resume talks with management on Monday

Health'Agni Natchathiram' to begin May 4, Tamil Nadu braces for peak summer heat

HealthHealth Ministry's child health screening guidelines focus on new-age challenges

HealthHealth Ministry releases framework on screening, treatment of childhood diabetes