New Reporting Leads to Strategic Insights into Child Lead Poison Prevention, Dec 16, 2020
Dec 16, 2020
Half of Pennsylvania kids are not getting tested for lead by their second birthday, despite CDC guidelines. There is no safe level of lead in a child’s system; exposure to lead, even at low levels, can cause intellectual, behavioral, and academic deficits. The earlier lead poisoning is detected, the more effective the treatment.
Black children are poisoned by lead at rates more than twice that of White children.
Latinx children are poisoned by lead at rates 1.5 times greater than White children.
Black and Latinx children are disproportionately poisoned because they are more likely to live in properties built before 1970—around the time when lead in paint was finally banned for residential use.
Of all children tested, kids with private health insurance are more likely to be tested than kids on Medicaid—even though Medicaid requires children to be tested and private coverage does not; 4 out of 10 children on Medicaid aren’t tested even once before they turn two.
Lead poisoning is an urban, suburban, and rural problem.
provide more complete race and ethnicity data and geographic information,
and write a summary analysis of the data to clarify report findings for policymakers, advocates, and the general public.
All of these recommendations were included in this latest DOH report.
Learn more about lead poisoning in Pennsylvania below.
Listen here as Colleen McCauley, PCCY Health Policy Director, and Erin Blair, a home visiting nurse and advocacy director for the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium, speak with the Pennsylvania Action Coalition about new lead legislation they helped get passed in Philadelphia working together in PCCY’s Lead Free Philly Coalition.
Read the PCCY fact sheetthat we distributed to candidates during election season to educate them on this critical issue that affects their communities.