No links to illness from lead?
Please can you then explain why new cancer treatments that involve removing lead and other heavy metals are showing such promising results in the likes acute myeloid leukaemia and small cell lung cancer, with first products receiving orphan drug status in the US earlier this year. This is a lot of new science and the work is ongoing.
In the meantime have a read of the following published by the Game Conservancy and in particular have a read of the papers cited.
www.gwct.org.uk
Alternatively have a read of
Wild game hunting is a popular activity in many regions of the United States. Recently, the presence of lead fragments in wild game meat, presumably f…
www.sciencedirect.com
Shows that eating lead shot game results in a higher lead level in the blood compared to those who do not eat leadshot game.
Hunt et al. Demonstrated the bioavailability of ingested lead through studies in scientific pigs which have a very similar gut to humans and are used as a surrogate.
Human consumers of wildlife killed with lead ammunition may be exposed to health risks associated with lead ingestion. This hypothesis is based on published studies showing elevated blood lead concentrations in subsistence hunter populations, retention of ammunition residues in the tissues of...
journals.plos.org
Finally the core research that was the fundamental springboard to the development of new Cancer therapies involving the removal of lead and other toxic metals.
You are fully free to think that lead ingestion is not harmful. Go back 30 to 40 years the same view was on tobacco. Whilst you can still smoke in private you cannot smoke in any public area where others can inhale second hand smoke.
With shooting, every time you fire a gun you are putting more lead into the environment, and in particular meat products destined for human consumption.
A cornerstone of shooting is that we are eating free range game free from toxic injections, chemicals etc. Yet it is being shot with a widely regarded as toxic substance necessitating major health warnings from healthcare and food standards professions. Doesn’t quite square.