Title: What Everyone Should Know About Lead
1Lead Poisoning Prevention
- What Everyone Should Know About Lead
Lead Safe Families is a program of the Southern
New Jersey Perinatal Cooperative, a non-profit
agency serving families since 1982. LSF and Wipe
Out Lead NJ are funded by the NJ Dept. of
Community Affairs.
2What is Lead?
- A highly toxic, heavy metal element
- No living thing needs it
- Used in many products
3Where is Lead Found?
- Lead Based Paint
- Soil
- Water
- Occupations Hobbies
- Food and Cosmetics
- Household Items
- Folk Remedies
4Major Source of Lead Poisoning
- Lead paint banned in homes in US in 1978.
- Lead dust is produced from lead paint as the
paint gets older or damaged - You cannot see lead dust.
5Lead Poisoning
- A serious but preventable health problem
- Lead is easily absorbed into the body
- Can cause problems in the brain, nervous system
and body. - Children under the age of 7 and pregnant women
are at greatest risk - Even children who seem healthy may have high
levels of lead in their blood
6How Kids Get Lead Poisoning
- Ingestion
- Hand to mouth activity
- Paint dust, paint chips, contaminated soil,
drinking water, food - Breathing
- Breeze
- Renovations
- Children may inhale fumes if paint is heated
- During pregnancy
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8Effects of Lead in Children
- Even small amounts of lead can lead to permanent
damage to the brain and nervous system - Behavioral problems hyperactivity, ADD, ADHD
- Learning problems , mental retardation
- Brain Damage
- Lower reading, vocabulary, and math scores in
school - Speech and language difficulties
- Emotional problems anger, aggression,
depression - Discipline problems, school absenteeism,
delinquency - Poor attention span
- Lower IQ
9Leads Lasting Impact
- Affects every system of body
- Young children are at greatest risk
- Especially harmful to developing brain and
nervous system - Damage may be permanent
10Other Effects of Childhood Lead Poisoning
- Headaches
- Hearing problems / hearing loss
- Anemia
- Kidney damage
- Delayed or slowed development
- Decreased muscle and bone growth
- Clumsiness / slow reflexes
- Joint pains
- Stomach cramps
11Leads Effects on Childrens Bodies
- Consequences of High Exposure
- Seizures / Convulsions
- Unconsciousness
- Coma
- Death
12Effects in Pregnancy
- Lead crosses the placenta
- Lead stored in bones may be released into blood
(and carried through blood to fetus) - Prematurity
- Low Birth Weight
- Miscarriage or Stillbirth
13Symptoms of Lead Poisoning
- Symptoms are rare, and common to other childhood
ailments - Stomach aches, stomach cramps
- Headaches
- Joint and muscle pain
- Fatigue
- Sleep disorders
- Most lead-poisoned kids show NO symptoms until
the damage is already done - It can be difficult to convince landlords and
parents
14- Lead poisoned children are 6 times more likely to
have learning disabilities
Jessica Wolpaw Reyes (2007) Environmental
Policy as Social Policy? The Impact of Childhood
Lead Exposure on Crime, The B.E. Journal of
Economic Analysis Policy Vol. 7 Iss. 1
(Contributions), Article 51.
15- Lead poisoned children are 7 times more likely to
drop out of high school
16- Lead poisoned children are robbed of nearly
200,000 in lifetime earnings because of lost IQ
17When lead poisoned children suffer, we all
suffer!
- Higher taxes
- Cost of Special Education
- Higher Medical Insurance
- Welfare / Social Service Program costs
- Criminal Justice System
- Quality of Life for Society
18Testing
- Lead-poisoned children rarely show obvious
symptoms - A blood test is the only way to know whether your
child has lead poisoning - Finger stick (Capillary / filter paper)
- Venous draw
A SIMPLE BLOOD TEST CAN PREVENT A LIFETIME
SPOILED BY THE IRREVERSIBLE DAMAGED CAUSED BY
LEAD POISONING.
19Who Should Be Tested?
- All children must be tested for lead at
- 9-18 months (best at 1 year), and
- 18-26 months (best at 2 years)
- Any child under the age of 6 years who has never
been tested for lead should be tested immediately.
20Who Should Be Tested?
- At other ages - if your child is at risk
- Lives in or regularly visits a house or daycare
built before 1978 - Lives with or frequently visits an adult whose
job or hobby involves lead (painters, home
improvement workers, fishermen, etc.) - If another child in the home tests positive for
lead - All children are at risk for lead poisoning
21If a Child Has Elevated Blood Lead
- Check childs environment for sources of lead
- Remove as many sources as possible
- Use prevention strategies!
- OR
- Remove child from sources
- Chelation
- Hospitalization
22Even low levels cause damage!
23How Families Can Protect Children
- Reduce risk from lead paint
- Keep home clean with Special Methods
- Good nutrition
- Good hygiene
- Get lead out of drinking water
- Dont bring lead in
- Remove paint safely / dont remove lead paint
yourself - GET CHILD TESTED
- Know the Number
24- The most effective prevention strategy is to
identify lead hazards before the child is ever
exposed.
25Wipe Out Lead New Jersey
- A primary prevention approach to reduce childhood
lead poisoning
26Who is Eligible ?
- Free kits are available to
- Pregnant women
- Families with small children
- Home or apartment built before 1978, or of
unknown age
27Partnering with WOLNJ
- Become a Wipe Out Lead NJ Provider Partner by
distributing lead test kits to your families. - Distribute kit request postcards to interested
families - Talk with your families on a regular basis about
lead - Identify other Provider Partners to help
distribute test kits - Identify Community Organizations, Parent
Meetings, Tenant Associations and other groups
for Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Education
28Enrolment Form
29Results Letters
30What if lead is found?
- WOL staff will send prevention information.
- If lead levels are high, we will telephone
- Recommend blood tests for children
- Education on nutrition, hygiene, special cleaning
- Referrals to other agencies (WIC, EI, DCA, HD,
etc.) - Interim Controls
- LHCA fund loans
The Federal Govt. defines hazardous as gt
40µg/ft2 for floors and gt 250µg/ft2 for
windowsills.
31LHCA Fund Loans
- Money is available to homeowners and landlords to
fix lead hazards - NJ provides low interest (3 interest deferred
payment) loans - Property owners from all income levels can apply
- Low-income households may not have to pay back
the loan. - All credit histories are considered.
- LSF staff helps complete the paperwork.
- There does not need to be a lead-poisoned child
in the - property!
32More about lead sources
- Lead Based Paint
- Soil
- Water
- Occupations Hobbies
- Food and Cosmetics
- Household Items
- Toys
- Folk Remedies
33State Resources
- Wipe Out Lead New Jersey 1-888-722-2903
- NJ DHSS Family Health Line 1-800-328-3838
- Department of Community Affairs 1-877-DCA-LEAD
- Local County And City Health Departments
- Legal Services of New Jersey 1-888-LSNJ-LAW
- State and Regional Childhood Lead Poisoning
Prevention Task Forces and Coalitions
34National Resources
- Poison Control
- (800) 222-1222
- Automatically connects callers to their local
poison control center - National Lead Information Center (NLIC)
- (800) 424-LEAD (or 1-800-424-5323)
- www.epa.gov/lead/nlic.htm
- Information about lead hazards and their
prevention - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) - (888) 232-6789
- Promotes state and local screening efforts
develops improved treatments for lead exposure
35National Resources contd
- The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
- (301) 504-7923
- Identifies and regulates sources of lead exposure
in consumer products - Office of Safe Drinking Water Hotline
- (800) 426-4791 900 a.m. - 530 p.m. Eastern
Time Monday - Friday. - Information on groundwater issues and
regulations/programs developed in response to the
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986 and
1996 - Toxics Release Inventory
- EPCRA - Information on Industrial Lead Releases
- (800) 424-9346 (EPCRA Call Center) (800) 553-7672
(TDD) - Published by the U.S. EPA, provides information
regarding toxic chemicals used, manufactured,
treated, transported, or released into the
environment
36Web Resources
- Wipe Out Lead New Jersey
- www.snjpc.org/programs/wipeoutlead.html
- Lead Safe New Jersey
- www.leadsafenj.org
- EPA- Lead in Paint, Dust and Soil
- www.epa.gov/opptintr/lead/indes.html
- HUD- Office of Healthy Homes Lead Hazard
Control - www.hud.gov/offices/lead/index.cfm
- Alliance for Healthy Homes
- www.aeclp.org