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Lead Poisoning/Healthy Homes
Lead Poisoning Prevention & Healthy Homes Branch
The Lead Poisoning Prevention/Healthy Homes Branch investigates noise and odor complaints as well as preventing lead poisoning in children, using education, investigation and medical assistance.
Lead Poisoning Prevention
Frequently asked questions | Home remodeling guide Where to go for a lead test County lead poisoning services | County lead poisoning education Fact sheet: lead poisoning This page contains a LOT of information - and it's not finished yet. You can read it straight through, like a book - or use the navigation bar above or Frequently Asked Questions list below to find just the information you need. Check the County's Lead Hazard Control Program, which provides grants to low- and moderate-income homeowners to control or abate hazardous conditions in their home caused by the presence of deteriorating lead-based paint. Frequently Asked Questions
What is Lead Poisoning? Having lead in your body is not normal. Lead poisoning happens when someone in your family gets lead in their body. Every day you are surrounded by lead in places where you would never know to look.
- all may contain lead and be dangerous to you and your family. Lead gets into your body when you eat or drink something that has lead in it. Even though you may not think that you are eating lead dust, when you touch it and don't wash your hands before eating, then you eat the lead too. Lead dust can be anywhere in your house and vacuuming won't make it go away. Lead is most dangerous to pregnant women and children under the age of seven. Lead in a pregnant woman's body can get into the unborn baby - and small childrens' growing bodies can be easily harmed by lead. When your baby crawls on the floor, tiny lead pieces can end up in your baby because babies put everything in their mouths. Maybe your baby found a pacifier lying under the couch, and when you looked carefully, you found dust on it. This dust could contain enough lead to poison your baby. Lead can also be extremely dangerous for remodelers. Lead poisoning happens when someone
in your family
gets lead in their body. Why is lead poisoning a problem in the Saint Louis area? Lead is a problem in the Saint Louis area because we have many old buildings with lead-painted surfaces. Most children get lead poisoning because they live in old houses that were painted with lead paint. When this paint gets old, is disturbed during remodeling and turns into dust or chips, it becomes dangerous. Lead paint is found in most homes that were built before 1960 and in many homes that were built before 1978. This dangerous paint may have been used indoors and outdoors. The greater Saint Louis area has many old homes that were built before 1978. If you live in any of these homes, you and your family may be at risk from the lead dust and chips. Even if you live in a newer home, lead may be found in the soil outdoors where your children play, or in other buildings where your children stay and visit. Lead Fact!
76% of all homes in Saint Louis County and 99% of all
homes in the City of Saint Louis were built before 1978. All of these homes
could contain lead paint.
Other places where your child might find lead are in painted toys, old furniture, drinking water, imported canned food, crayons, pottery, leaded crystal, folk remedies (greta, azarcon used to treat upset stomachs). Other sources of lead are hobbies that use lead such as making pottery, soldering stained glass, refinishing furniture and making bullets or lead sinkers for fishing. Lead is a problem in the Saint Louis
area because
we have many old buildings with lead-painted surfaces. Who is at risk? Any one at any age can be poisoned by lead. It doesn't matter where you live. If you're rich or poor, young or old, or any color under the rainbow, you can get lead poisoned. Small children are the most easily poisoned because very small amounts of lead can poison them. Children are still growing and their bodies keep more lead in them than adults. This lead harms children's brain development and growth. Children spend most of their time close to the floor and put everything in their mouths. A few tiny grains of lead can be enough to poison a child. Who is at risk? Everyone, but especially
a child under the age of seven, is at risk.
Lead Fact!
Lead the size of three grains of sugar
eaten over a period of time can poison a child.
It is estimated that the average US house with lead paint has about 100 pounds of lead.
How can you tell if someone is lead poisoned? In children, lead can slow growth, harm their developing brain, damage the kidneys and liver, and decrease hearing. Children may have no symptoms at all, or they may complain of a stomach ache, have behavior problems, or be "unable to sit still". Adults may complain of a stomach ache, feeling tired, having a hard time sleeping and thinking, or have muscle or joint pains. Signs of lead poisoning may not become noticeable until the level is very dangerous. The only way to know for sure is to have a blood lead test. Lead Fact!
Your child can be lead poisoned and you
may not know.
The only way to know for sure is to get a blood lead test.
What do blood lead levels mean? Having lead in your blood is not normal. Blood lead levels are measured in micrograms per deciliter ( µg/dl) of blood. If you have blood lead levels at or above 10 µg/dl, you need to be concerned and talk to your doctor or clinic.
Can lead poisoning be treated? Lead poisoning can be treated but prevention is best. If your levels are between 10 µg/dl and 14 µg/dl, you should be retested as your doctor/nurse advises. Between 15 ug/dl and 19 ug/dl, you should be retested as advised and you will be given steps to take to reduce the lead in your surroundings. If the level is above 20 ug/dl, a repeat test is done. You will receive a medical checkup and someone should come to your home to help you find the sources of lead. Medications to reduce the lead level may be started. Other family members may also need to be tested. Lead poisoning isn't like a cold. A pill will not easily fix it. Once lead is in a body, it will stay there for a long time even with treatment. There may be permanent damage. In mild cases of lead poisoning, the "treatment" is finding the lead and making your home safe so that no more lead enters the body. If you can keep any more lead from getting into your body, then the amount of lead in the body will go down because some lead is slowly passed from the body every day through the urine and stool. Eating foods that are rich in iron (meat, fish, eggs, beans and green vegetables) and calcium (milk and cheese) and avoiding fried foods, help to keep the body from absorbing more lead. In serious cases of lead poisoning a child or adult may need "chelation therapy". Medications are taken that attach to the lead in the body and help to get the lead out much faster through the urine. If the blood lead level is very high, you or your child may have to stay in the hospital for a while.
Lead poisoning can be treated but prevention
is best.
How do you prevent lead poisoning? You prevent lead poisoning by knowing where the lead is and learning how to live with it safely. A lead-safe house may have many places with lead but not be dangerous because the lead has no way of getting from where it is into your body. While some people think that lead poisoning happens when children chew on paint chips that taste sweet, actually the dust from deteriorated lead paint is the main problem. You can help make your house lead-safe when you make sure that your house is clean and free from this dust. Wash your hands and your childrens' hands frequently, particularly before eating. To get a lead-safe house, you need to know the following:
You prevent lead poisoning by knowing where
the lead is
and learning how to live with it safely. Lead Fact!
A lead-safe house is free of lead or one
where all of the places that contain lead have been found and dealt with safely.
A simple lead cleaning mixture
Are there any lead laws in the Saint Louis area?
The lead laws in the Saint Louis area are
meant to protect children from becoming lead poisoned.
Lead Fact!
Children who eat a well balanced diet that
is high in calcium and iron
may not be harmed as much by lead as children who eat junk food and sweets.
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