10/27/2023
Happy National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week!
We at Sustainable Resources Center (SRC) are committed to preventing childhood lead exposure through education, free lead testing for children under the age of 6, and by supporting the City of Minneapolis and Hennepin County with their Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes Grants.
Lead is a heavy metal that has no safe level in the human body. Children especially are at risk of blood lead poisoning. Blood toxicity can result in many negative health effects, including behavioral and learning difficulties, hearing and speech issues, slowed growth and development, and brain and nervous system damage. Young children are often exposed to lead through touching, swallowing, or breathing in lead dust.
Risk factors for childhood lead exposure include:
Residing in older housing (the EPA estimates that greater than 80% of homes built pre-1978 contain lead-based paint), living in poverty (when comparing areas of different poverty levels, high levels of poverty are associated with greater elevated blood lead levels; neighborhoods with higher-than-MN-average poverty were 3.5x more likely to have elevated blood lead levels compared to neighborhoods with less-than-MN-average poverty), and working a job with lead exposure (jobs such in construction and manufacturing have higher levels of exposure to lead).
The effects of lead are permanent but lead exposure can be limited or minimized by taking proper precautionary measures. Here are some actions you can take to limit lead exposure:
Eat a well-balanced diet containing foods rich in calcium, iron, and vitamin C, regularly clean around the home (especially in dusty areas and areas of high friction with chipping paint, with wet-washing techniques to prevent lead dust in the air, more information at https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/lead/fs/cleaningup.html ), and ensure the products being used in the home are lead-free (some imported toys, folk and traditional medicines, spices, cosmetics, and imported ceramics contain lead).
In recent years, children raised in Minneapolis or St. Paul have a 2x greater risk of lead exposure than the MN average and any other region of MN. Source: MDH Blood Lead Information System.
The Lead Division at the SRC offers free in-home visits to educate families on the dangers of lead and test peeling paint in the house for lead. The SRC also provides grants through Hennepin County to help with the cost of replacing windows with lead paint along with other home safety concerns. Events are hosted throughout the year where free lead tests for children under 6, people who are pregnant, or people who work jobs with possible exposure to lead can receive free lead testing. If you would like to learn more about the services the SRC offers, visit our website at src-mn.org or give us a call at (612) 870-4255. Further information about the Lead Hazard Control Grant can be found at https://www.src-mn.org/what-we-do/lead-hazard-control.html and https://www.hennepin.us/residents/property/lead-paint-hazards