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Fact Sheet on Lead Paint Poisoning


 

Fact Sheet on Lead Paint Poisoning

FACT: You have the right to seek compensation for your child’s lead paint poisoning.

FACT:  Lead paint poisoning is one of the most common environmental health conditions affecting children in this country. Up to 4 million children are affected by lead paint poisoning.

FACT: One out of six of children affected by lead poisoning are 6 years old or younger.

FACT: Children with severe cases of lead poisoning can experience brain damage, frequent headaches, hearing problems, stunted growth, diminished learning, and behavioral dysfunction (especially hyperactivity).

FACT: Approximately 86-95% of all lead paint use is confined to housing built before 1960.

FACT: Many apartment and houses built before 1950 were painted with lead based paint with concentrations of 50% lead by weight.

FACT: Children’s touching of walls is not the only method of lead paint contamination. Lead can make its way into a child’s respiratory and digestive system through dust, soil, water, food, beverages, imported pottery/ceramics/china, fishing weights/rods, and certain health foods and cosmetics.

FACT: A child can be lead poisoned and not experience any physical symptoms or changes in behavior.

FACT: Blood tests are the only way to determine whether a child has lead poisoning. 

FACT: A child with blood lead levels of 10 mcg/dcl or greater is lead poisoned according to Centers for Disease Control standards.

FACT: A child is estimated to lose 2 IQ points for every 10 mcg/dcl increase in blood lead levels.

FACT: Lead poisoning can be very harmful even at low levels causing diminished learning, behavioral dysfunctions, kidney damage, and stomach damage.

FACT: Children can be harmed from lead paint poisoning while in the womb.

FACT: Improperly removing lead based paint from a house or apartment can increase the likelihood of lead paint poisoning.   

LEAD PAINT RISK QUIZ

If you answer yes to any of the below questions, your child may be at risk for lead poisoning.

Do your children?

Yes

No

Don't Know

1) Live in or often visit a house that was built before 1950.

2) Live in or often visit a house that was built before 1978 and is being remodeled.

3) Have playmates or friends that have high lead levels.

4) Live in a zip code where more than 27% of the housing was built before 1950 (check with your local health department to see if you live in a high risk area).

 

5) Belong to a high risk group, including living in poverty, receiving aid from Medicaid and/or WIC.

 

 

 
 
 

Your child may also need to be screened for lead poisoning if he has any of the following risk factors that place him at risk for being exposed to lead:

 
 
 

6) Eats or chews on nonfood things (called pica), such as paint chips or dirt.

 

7) Has family members that work at a place or has a hobby that involves any of the following:

  • radiator repair

  • lead industry

  • welding

  • battery manufacture or repair

  • house construction or repair

  • smelting

  • chemical preparation

  • making pottery

  • going to a firing range

  • stained glass with lead solder

  • brass or copper foundry

  • valve and pipe fittings

  • bridge, tunnel and elevated highway construction

  • industrial machinery or equipment

  • casting ammunition, fishing weights or toy soldiers

  • refinishing furniture

  • burning lead painted wood

  • automotive repair shop

 

8) Lives or plays near an area with any of the following:

  • smelter

  • hazardous waste site

  • lead industry

  • place where batteries are manufactured or repaired

  • house construction site

  • heavily traveled major highway

  • place where cars are abandoned or repaired

 

9) Consumes any of the following products:

  • medicines (especially home remedies) imported from another country, including:

    • pay-loo-ah (fever and rash treatment).

    • azarcon (a Mexican treatment for intestinal blockage or 'empacho' that is 90% lead. Also called Maria Luisa, Liga, Alarzon, Greta, Coral and Rueda. It is a bright orange powder).

    • Asian folk remedies, including Ghasard (a brown powder used to aid digestion), Bali Goli (a round, flat black bean that is dissolved in water) and Kandu (a red powder used to treat stomachaches).

    • Middle Eastern folk remedies, including farouk (teething) and bint al zahab (colic).

  • nutritional pills other than vitamins

  • cosmetics like surma or kohl

 

10) Lives in a home in which the plumbing has lead pipes, lead solder or lead containing holding tanks.

11) Eats foods that are cooked or stored in imported or glazed pottery.

 

12) Eats foods that are canned outside the United States.

 

13) Frequently chews on keys (which often contain small amounts of lead).

 

14) Has access to other lesser known sources of lead, including:

  • curtain weights

  • some candles made outside of the United States

  • pewter figurines

  • lead sinkers used for fishing

  • lead soldiers and other collectible figurines

     

 

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