KEEP ME LEAD-FREE!
Reducing Childhood Lead Poisoning in Spokane
- Total number of kids screened: 469
- Number of kids with elevated blood lead levels*: 28
- Number of kids with blood lead poisoning**: 2
View the KHQ-TV news video featuring The Lands Council's work to reduce childhood lead poisoning in Spokane.
Click here for upcoming blood lead screenings.
Click here for information about all past blood lead screenings.
Why should we be concerned about lead? Lead is a known toxin with no beneficial function in humans or animals. There is no safe level of lead in the body. Childhood lead poisoning, which still affects thousands of children under age six in the U.S. each year, can lead to reduced IQs, behavior problems, learning and developmental disabilities, brain damage, anemia, and in some extreme cases, death. Symptoms of lead poisoning can include irritability, headaches, difficulty concentrating, fatigue, reduced appetite, weight loss…or no symptoms at all. Kids in Spokane get lead poisoning by inhaling, eating, or drinking lead that can come from contaminated beaches on the Spokane River, contaminated industrial sites (such as the BNSF Lead Site in Hillyard), cracking, chipping, or peeling lead-based paint in the home, toys, residual deposits from past use of leaded gasoline and lead arsenate pesticides, and lead found in drinking water pipes. You can help protect your children from lead poisoning by washing their hands frequently, making sure they have a diet rich in calcium and iron, and keeping your home clean and dust-free.
While the numbers of lead-poisoned children have declined in recent years, the burden of lead poisoning continues to fall disproportionately on low-income families living in older, poorly-maintained housing. In 2005, the Washington State Study of Lead Hazards in Housing classified much of Spokane as "Priority 1," a ranking which represents neighborhoods having the highest concentration of risk factors for childhood lead poisoning, such as older homes and low to moderate median household incomes. In that same year, a two-year-old child living in a rental property in Spokane's West Central neighborhood was lead poisoned by consuming lead-tainted soil. The soil was likely contaminated by lead paint chips. This child, whose family was previously unaware of lead hazards or the availability of local resources, was hospitalized for many days with a blood lead level of 51 µg/dL.
In an effort to protect the health of those most affected by exposure to this dangerous environmental toxin, The Lands Council's Environmental Health program, with a 2-year Targeted Lead Grant from the EPA, is educating families in Spokane about the health effects, exposure pathways, and prevention of childhood lead poisoning and offering free, voluntary on-the-spot blood-lead testing of children ages 0-6. In collaboration with partners such as the Spokane Regional Health District, SNAP, City of Spokane, Spokane County Head Start/Early Head Start, WA Department of Health, and neighborhood councils, we are building awareness of childhood lead poisoning and encouraging Spokane families to get their kids and homes tested for lead. EPA's Targeted Lead Grant Program-and projects such as ours that are supported by these grant funds-is playing a major role in meeting the federal goal of eliminating childhood lead poisoning as a major public health concern by 2010.
How does it work? First, we identify Spokane neighborhoods thought to be "high-risk" for childhood lead poisoning by compiling data on age of housing stock, median household income, families in poverty, and presence of kids 6 and under into GIS software and producing detailed, color-coded maps (click here for neighborhood maps). We then go door-to-door in these neighborhoods, passing along information about childhood lead poisoning to families, helping them access free home lead testing programs through SNAP and the City of Spokane, and advertising upcoming blood lead testing events. At these events, our nurse takes a "finger stick" blood sample, mixes it with a reagent solution, and feeds it on a slide into a portable machine called LeadCare II. The entire process takes approximately 10 minutes per child. Kids walk away with a lollipop, sticker, and cool band-aid, and parents receive written results of their child's blood lead level, along with a home lead test kit.
Without blood lead testing, you may not even know that your child has lead poisoning!
Without testing your home, you may not even know that it contains lead!
Getting our kids and homes tested for lead is one of the best steps we can take towards prevention! For information on free home lead testing, contact the City of Spokane at 509.625.6325 and SNAP at 509.744-3370 Ext. 244. For more information on free blood lead testing for kids 6 and under, contact The Lands Council at 509.209.2403, or view our schedule of upcoming blood lead screenings.
*The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) considers a blood lead level to be elevated if it measures over 0 µg/dL; however, nobody is required to act unless the level is over 10 µg/dL.
**The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) considers a child to have blood lead poisoning if their blood lead level is 10 µg/dL or higher.
FOR PARENTS:
Visit these links for more information about lead poisoning:
For a packet of materials or questions about lead, call the National Lead Information Center at 1-800-424-LEAD.
Current News:
- Press Release: The Lands Council, Spokane Neighborhood Action Programs (SNAP), and the City of Spokane celebrate National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week October 19th-25th, 2008.
- Free Lead Testing: written by Siarah Myron - InHealthNW June 2008
- View the KXLY news story and video featuring The Lands Council's work to reduce childhood lead poisoning in Spokane.
- Kids Tested for Lead Levels: written by Mike Prager - The Spokesman Review March 20, 2008
Contacts: Kat Hall, Environmental Health Program Director at khall@landscouncil.org, 509-209-2403 or Nicole Powell, Environmental Health Program Assistant at npowell@landscouncil.org, 509-209-2404.
|