CDC Study Shows No Health Risk
Associated with Traditional Ammunition
A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study on
human lead levels of hunters in North Dakota has confirmed
what hunters throughout the world have known for hundreds of
years, that consuming game harvested with traditional
ammunition poses absolutely no health risk to people,
including children, and that the call to ban lead ammunition
was and remains a scare tactic being pushed by anti-hunting
groups to forward their political agenda.
Today, additional information became available about the CDC
study, originally released yesterday, that is important to
disseminate to hunters, their families and the general
public about the total and complete lack of any evidence of
a human health risk from consuming game harvested using
traditional ammunition. For instance, in the study the
average lead level of the hunters tested was lower than that
of the average American.
In the CDC's study, children's lead levels had a mean of
just 0.88 micrograms per deciliter, which is less than half
the national average for children and an infinitesimally
small fraction of the level that the CDC considers to be of
concern for children (10 micrograms per deciliter). Yet,
despite the total and complete lack of any evidence from
this study of the existence of a human health risk, the
Department of Health nevertheless urges that children under
6 and pregnant women not eat venison harvested using
traditional ammunition. The North Dakota Department of
Health's recommendation is based on a "zero tolerance"
approach to the issue of blood lead levels that is not
supported by science or the CDC's guidelines.
To further put in perspective the claims concerning the
safety of game harvested using traditional ammunition,
consider this statement from the Iowa Department of Public
Health (IDPH) -- a state agency that has conducted an
extensive panel of blood-lead testing for more than 15
years: "IDPH maintains that if lead in venison were a
serious health risk, it would likely have surfaced within
extensive blood-lead testing since 1992 with 500,000 youth
under 6 and 25,000 adults having been screened." It has
not.
Read the NSSF press release.