Health experts are calling for new national guidelines amid fears that up to 100,000 young Australian children could have dangerously high levels of lead in their blood.
The experts say current guidelines on lead levels must be updated urgently in light of new figures based on analysis of US exposure rates and published in the latest Medical Journal of Australia (MJA).
In a letter to the MJA, Mark Taylor of Sydney's Macquarie University, Chris Winder of the Australian Catholic University in Sydney and Bruce Lanphear of Canada's Simon Fraser University, say 100,000 Australian children aged up to four could have blood lead levels linked to health problems.
These include behavioural problems and low IQ.
Guidelines recommending blood lead levels of below 10 micrograms per decilitre of blood introduced by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) in 1993 are "increasingly obsolete", the researchers say.