Title: Rochesters Model Healthy Home
1- Rochesters Model Healthy Home
- Katrina Smith Korfmacher, PhDKate Kuholski
- Community Outreach and Education Core
- Environmental Health Sciences CenterUniversity
of Rochester
2Rochesters Healthy Home
- Interactive museum/ model for Healthy Home
practices and resources
3Rochester Context
- Increased awareness of lead poisoning
(2000-present) - Many home-based hazards contribute to health
disparities (asthma, lead, etc.) - Need for Hands-on education
4Community Context
- Get the Lead Out (2002)
- Lead Lab (2002)
- Community Lead Summit (2004)
- Lead law passage (2005)
- National groups integrate HH issues (asthma
triggers, toxins, lead, etc.) - Southwest Rochester involvement in lead direct
action
5Healthy Home Purpose
- Provide education about home-based environmental
health hazards - Promote effective reduction of hazards
- Evaluate the effectiveness of hands-on home
environmental health education - Establish a community hub for future home
environmental health education projects
6Partners
- University of Rochester EHSC (COEC)
- South West Area Neighborhood (SWAN)
- Rochester Fatherhood Resource Initiative (RFRI)
- Building Economic Empowerment, Achieving
Stability (BEEAMS) - Principles for Collaboration June 2004
7Lead Poisoning in Rochester
8RCAN School RN Survey 2005Asthma Prevalence by
County
- Chemung 8.3
- Livingston 8.0
- Monroe 8.2
- Ontario 8.4
- Schuyler 1.4
- Seneca 7.2
- Steuben 7.8
- Wayne 7.5
- Yates 9.7
New York State 7.6 United States 7.7
According to the NYS DOH, asthma prevalence is
inversely related to annual household income.
9Asthma Hospitalizations - Monroe County
102005 Care Coordination Home Visit Outcomes
32 decrease in Absences (Pre/ Post) 68 decrease
in Emergency Room Visits (Pre/Post) 95 decrease
in Hospitalizations (Pre/Post)
Appendix C
11Timeline
- Monthly partner meetings (2004-persent)
- Received pilot project grant (Jan. 2006)
- Identify and lease home (Jan May 2006)
- Sampling photodocumentation (ongoing)
- Create Museum displays (Feb.-June 2006)
- Grand opening (June 19, 2006)
- Outreach tours (July 2006-ongoing)
- Hired Outreach Coordinator (Jan. 2007)
- Evaluation (ongoing)
12Site 700 West Main
13- Asthma Triggers
- Smoke
- Dust Mites
- Pets
- Mold
- Pests
Household Chemicals Normal or misuse of
Cleaning Products Pesticides Detergents Paints
Lead Hazards Lead in dust Lead in soil Leaded
paint chips
Indoor Air Quality Radon Carbon
Monoxide Asbestos
14Museum display topics
15mold, asbestos
mold, hous ehold chemicals
dust mites, CO, lead
dust mites, lead, pets, smoking
household chemicals, CO, lead
asbestos, CO, radon, mold
16Toxics Educator Program
- Complement to Healthy Home
- Funded by CARE (EPA grant)
- Administered by Action for a Better Community
- Toxics Educator presentations
- Focus on Healthy Home topics
17Lead Hazards
18What are Lead Hazards?
- Lead
- a highly toxic metal that was added to paint and
gasoline to improve quality - can also be found in some jewelry, water, home
remedies, or ceramic glazes - Rochesters most common problems are lead hazards
from old paint and household dust
19Why the focus on lead?
- Nationally, 2 of children have elevated blood
lead - In New York State, 5 of children
- In Monroe County, 7.4
- City of Rochester, nearly 25
- Some neighborhoods over 30
20What is Lead Poisoning?
- Most dangerous for children
- growing brains and bodies
- hand-to-mouth behavior exposes children to leaded
dust or paint - can cause learning and behavioral
- low levels of lead can cause problems,
even if the child appears okay - No safe lead levels even for adults
- Pregnant moms can pass lead to their babies
- You can only tell if someone has lead poisoning
by testing their blood
21Brain Growth and Neuron Connection
22How You May Be Exposed to Lead in Your Home
- Paint in pre-1978 homes
- Leaded dust
- Friction on painted surfaces
- Not using lead safe work practices when
disturbing leaded paint - Bare soil
23Asthma Triggers
24What is Asthma?
- Long-term health condition which affects your
ability to breathe - No cure - but can be controlled
- Runs in families
- Airways to the lungs are sensitive to triggers
causing wheezing, coughing, and shortness of
breath
Normal Lungs
Asthma
25Who is Affected by Asthma?
- One of the most common childhood diseases
- Leading cause of missing school and work
- At least 3000 children in the Rochester City
Schools have asthma - 12 of children entering pre-K in RCSD were
hospitalized for asthma in the past year - Asthma rates are increasing
26Asthma Triggers
- Outdoors
- Pollen
- Dust
- Diesel Exhaust
- Ozone
- Home
- Smoke
- Dust Mites
- Pets
- Mold
- Pests
- Other
- Exercise
- Emotions
- Medications
- Cold air
- Strong odors
27Dust Mites
28(No Transcript)
29Asthma Triggers Cigarette Smoke
- Important asthma trigger
- Secondhand smoke is hazardous
- Tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 chemicals
- More than 430,000 Americans die from
smoking-related illnesses each year - Smoking when pregnant can increase chances for
low birth weight and other problems for the baby
30What Works?
- Mattress covers
- Removing pets
- Management of pests
- Healthy House cleaning
- No smoking
31Household Chemicals
32What are Household Chemicals?
- Many cleaning products, pesticides, and other
household chemicals are toxic - Can be toxic if swallowed, breathed, splashed in
eyes or on skin - Exposure can cause dizziness, headaches, or death
33Indoor Air ProblemsRadonCarbon
MonoxideAsbestos
34Hands-on displays
35Asthma safe bedroom
36(No Transcript)
37Outreach tours
- Community groups
- Government officials
- Health effects interest groups
- Schools
- Contractors
- Neighborhood residents
38Outreach initiatives
- RCAN parent group met in home
- Block club/church group meetings
- School/camp groups
- Host LSWP training
- Service learning
- Health fairs
- NET referrals
39How effective is in-home environmental health
education in high-risk neighborhoods?
40Evaluation
- Surveys
- Action sheets
- Follow up calls
- HHAC
- Project portfolio
41Impacts (June through December 2006)
- 400 visitors to home
- 13 volunteers contributed 165 hours
- 7 Lead Safe Work Practices courses
- Advisory Council grew from 3 to 20
- Initial follow-up shows high rate of compliance
- New grants total 50,000
- Part-time outreach coordinator
42Replication/dissemination
- Presented at three national meetings
- Frequent media coverage in area
- Teacher Mentors workshop
- Proposal for HH in northeast sector
- Guide to replication
43Future directions
- Ongoing funding
- School-based programming
- Home visitor trainings
- Program evaluation
- Expand on community partnerships
- Replication/Dissemination