Measured consumption of tap water in German infants and young children as background for potential health risk assessments: data of the DONALD Study

Hilbig, A; Kersting, M; Sichert-Hellert, W

HERO ID

1060434

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2002

Language

English

PMID

12396394

HERO ID 1060434
In Press No
Year 2002
Title Measured consumption of tap water in German infants and young children as background for potential health risk assessments: data of the DONALD Study
Authors Hilbig, A; Kersting, M; Sichert-Hellert, W
Journal Food Additives and Contaminants
Volume 19
Issue 9
Page Numbers 829-836
Abstract Contaminated tap water can become a health risk, e.g. by metals or environmental pollution particularly for sensitive population groups such as infants and young children. There is a lack of data on exactly measured water intake. In the DONALD Study, individual food and fluid intakes were measured by use of 3-day weighed diet records. Here we report on the distribution of individual intakes of tap water in 504 healthy normally nourished subjects aged 3-36 months (1962 diet records) between 1990 and 1998. We calculate scenarios for potential tap water contamination. Tap water intake per kg body weight was significantly higher in formula-fed (FF) infants than in breast-fed (BF) infants. The estimated median intake of lead and nitrate per kg body weight from tap water was higher in FF infants than in BF infants or mixed fed (MF) young children. The scenarios based on intakes at the median, P95 or maximums show that higher risks for exceeding the presently existing maximums could be expected in FF infants. Our data could also be used for estimations of potential risks from other contaminants of tap water.
Doi 10.1080/02652030210151859
Pmid 12396394
Wosid WOS:000178404800004
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Qa No