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Maryann Suero, Ph.D. Jacqueline Wuellner, RN, MPH April 6, 2002 Spotlight on Children’s Environmental Health Healthy Schools, Healthy You Conference
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Objective: Identify how and why children are more susceptible to some environmental exposures than adults Discuss some of the leading childhood illnesses that have strong environmental components Provide resources for participants
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What does “environment” mean?
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Environmental Exposures Sunshine Fresh Air Water
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Environmental Exposures Air pollutants Pesticides Lead Arsenic Mercury Asbestos Radon
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Routes of exposures Inhalation Ingestion Absorption through the skin
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Children Are Not Little Adults Different adverse health effects in Children vs Adults Physically different, many organ systems are not fully developed Behaviorally they are different Windows of Vulnerability throughout development
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Children Are Not Little Adults They are physically different, many organ systems are not fully developed
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Pound for pound, kids breathe more air than adults drink more water than adults eat more food than adults have increased surface area to body mass ratio relative to adults
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Pop quiz: The average baby drinks 5 ounces of fluid per kilogram of body weight per day. How much pop would an average man have to drink using the above formula????
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Answer: 30 twelve ounce drinks/day is the amount of liquid an adult must drink to equal proportionately what an infant drinks every day. Infant Adult
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Children Are Not Little Adults They behave differently than adults
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Difference in Behavior Explore the world through their senses Touch & Taste More time outdoors
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Differences in Behaviors Diet and eating habits differ Newborns - breast milk or formula Infants / Toddlers – “Fussy Eaters” abound “Grazing” is common School aged children
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Average child eats 6.9 times more apples than an adult, not accounting for child’s smaller size. Adults Non-nursing Infants
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Major Problems in CEH Lead poisoning Asthma School environments “Emerging” Issues
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Childhood Lead Poisoning While average childhood blood lead concentrations have declined Still large numbers of lead poisoned children, mostly in large urban areas Screening rates very low (perception that problem has gone away) Mostly caused by exposure to lead paint dust Disparities by race and income
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Lead Poisoning in the US
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Children with EBL (> 20ug/dl) in Selected Cities (1998)
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Toward Solving the Lead Poisoning Problem Raise the level of awareness More screening of children at risk Coordination of efforts (Federal, State, Local, Community Partners) Housing Family Services / Nutrition Environment Education Health
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Asthma in the US
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Components of Asthma Management I. Medical Management Diagnosis Trigger Identification Treatment Education
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Common Asthma Triggers Allergic Dust mites Molds Pollen Animal dander Pests Non-Allergic Tobacco smoke Pesticides Wood or coal smoke Ozone Particulate matter
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II. Environmental Management Trigger Identification Education Avoidance/remediation Education Components of Asthma Management
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Toward Solving the Asthma Epidemic More and better quality data needed No one organization has all the resources, technology or authority to solve the problem Requires coordination of efforts (Federal, State, Local, Community Partners) Health Housing Family Services Environment Education Agriculture
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School Environmental Health One of every 5 (includes children and adults) in US spends their days in schools GAO reports more than half of all schools report at least one environmental condition is unsatisfactory, especially poor IAQ
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School Environmental Health Lack funds for remediation High population density in schools Schools may have many hazardous chemicals
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Potential Environmental Hazards in Schools Poor indoor air quality Exposure to Asbestos Mercury Pesticides Other hazardous chemicals Schools often don’t recognize the problems
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When it comes to fetuses, infants, children, adolescents, we know VERY LITTLE
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Cumulative Exposure: We’re Still Trying! Consider one chemical with different routes of exposure Consider multiple chemicals with same mechanism of toxicity through one exposure pathway Consider multiple chemicals with same mechanism of toxicity through multiple routes of exposure Consider multiple health endpoints simultaneously
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Region 5 Center for Children’s Environmental Health 1-800-672-3113 Co-funded by EPA and ATSDR Serves as a Regional resource to: evaluate, treat and prevent environmental illness in children train pediatricians and others in environmental health issues promote children’s environmental health in communities expand knowledge of children’s environmental health through research
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EPA Resources on CEH www.epa.gov/children Tips to Protect Children from Environmental Threats (www.epa.gov/children/whatwe/tips.htm) Engage Youth in Children's Environmental Health Protection (www.epa.gov/children/whatwe/engage.pdf)
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Resources for Schools Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools www.epa.gov/iaq/schools Integrated Pest Management www.epa.gov/pesticides/ipm Mercury www.mercury-k12.org/ Environmental Management Systems approach to school environmental health Regional Resources for Schools (copies available)
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Where Do We Go From Here? We have much to learn (we don’t even know what we don’t know yet) We have to be creative, innovative, flexible (single media, single discipline approaches are not likely to work) We have to be proactive and cautious (we don’t want quick fixes to create more problems down the road)
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Children Are Different Exposures Doses Susceptibility Latency
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Resource for families, teachers, and communities Maryann Suero Regional Team Manager, Children’s Health US Environmental Protection Agency Region 5 77 W. Jackson Blvd, T-13J Chicago, IL 60604 (312) 886-9077 suero.maryann@epa.gov
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Resource for families and health care providers Jackee Wuellner, RN Coordinator Great Lakes Center for Children’s Environmental Health 1900 West Polk Street Chicago, IL 60612 312-633-5310 jwuell1@uic.edu
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A Healthy Environment Means Healthier Kids
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