If there's no science that says "one atom of lead anywhere in your body is bad", then saying "detectable" is meaningless.
I mean, if you said "we found a detectable number of bullets in half of children", now that would be bad.
*Another poster noted this level.
It would be meaningless on that case too.
Also meaningless is saying that 2% of the kids have a high level of lead, without saying what "high" means.
Oh, that's simple - it's defined as above the 98th percentile.
(I kid, I hope...)
But if only 2% of children have lead levels that were originally defined based on the worst 2.5%, that's a 20% reduction, so great news!?
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/lead/prevention/blood-lead-levels.h...
Did they find a problem? An improvement? Nothing? Nobody can tell by reading it alone.
If there's no science that says "one atom of lead anywhere in your body is bad", then saying "detectable" is meaningless.
I mean, if you said "we found a detectable number of bullets in half of children", now that would be bad.