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Identification and Control of Lead Hazards in Housing David Jacobs, PhD, CIH National Center for Healthy Housing United States April 2010
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Evidence of the Link Between Lead Paint and Lead Poisoning Historical Case Surveillance Data Environmental Correlate Studies Stable Isotope Ratios Lead-Based Paint as a Major Source of Childhood Lead Poisoning: A Review of the Evidence in Lead In Paint, Soil and Dust: Health Risks, Exposure Studies, Control Measures and Quality Assurance, Michael E. Beard and S.D. Allen Iske, Eds, American Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia, p. 175-187, 1995.
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DUST
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Lead Exposure Pathway
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Steps to Eliminate Lead Paint Hazards Determine if hazards are present Determine cause of hazard (water, others) Protect Occupants & Workers Hazard Control Options Cleanup Dust Testing
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RMD LPA Lead Paint X-Ray Fluorecense Analyzer Measures lead in as little as 2 to 4 seconds with 95% confidence
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Pb K L M N O e- E1=Eb Photoelectric E1>>Eb L-Shell XRF K-Shell XRF Compton Scatter XRF Generation
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Control Source of Paint Failure
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Options Permanent –Replace windows, doors, other building items –Enclose lead paint (new walls, siding) –Encapsulate lead paint (special long term coatings) –Remove lead paint using wet scraping, low-temperature heat guns, chemicals Short Term (Management) –Paint Stabilization –On-going Maintenance
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Options (2) Dust Control –Friction & Impact Surfaces –Special Cleaning Bare Soil –Vegetation –Mulch –Removal
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Avoid Tracking Lead Dust
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Plastic Sheeting Exterior
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Paint Scraping (Wet Methods)
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Containment for High Dust Jobs
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Dust and Friction/Impact
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Enclosing Window Sills With Sheet Metal
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Cleanup and Dust Removal Use High Efficiency Particulate Arrestor (HEPA) Vacuums and Wet Methods
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Wet Cleaning Separate Wash and Rinse Water
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Dust (Wipe) Testing
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Dust Wipe Sampling Method HUD Guidelines Appendix 13.1: Wipe Sampling for Settled Lead-Contaminated Dust
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US Dust Lead Standard Floors = 40 ug/ft 2 Interior Window Sills = 250 ug/ft 2 Set so that less than 5% of children would develop a PbB above the intervention level (15 ug/dL) Set in 1999 Now widely perceived as being insufficiently protective New NCHH proposal –10 ug/ft 2 and 100 ug/ft 2 for floors & sills
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Key US Lead Exposure Limits Ambient Air (old)1.5 ug/m 3 Ambient Air (new)0.1 – 0.3 ug/m 3 Settled Dust (Floors)40 ug/ft 2 10 ug/ft 2 (NCHH proposed) Settled Dust (Sills)250 ug/ft 2 Play Soil (bare)400 ppm Yard Soil (bare)1200 ppm Drinking Water15 ug/L New Housing Paint600 ppm (90) Existing Housing Paint1 mg/cm 2 or 5,000 ppm
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Key US Lead Exposure Limits (2) Workplace Air (8 hrs)50 ug/m 3 Permissible 30 ug/m 3 Action Level Exterior Concrete (Guidance) 800 ug/ft 2 Blood (Occupational)30 ug/dL Blood (Advisory)10 ug/dL (some jurisdictions now at 5)
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The Power of Surveillance and National Surveys Age of Residence, year built Poisoned Children (%) From the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), Phase 2, 1991-1994 National Average for all children (4.4% with Blood Lead Levels above 10 g/dL) African American Children Low Income Children All Children
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Housing Surveillance Data: Where is the Remaining Lead Paint?
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Dust Lead & Paint Lead: Ease of Contamination Current US definition of lead paint = 1 mg/cm 2 Sand a one square foot area, turn it into dust Spread the dust over a 10 ft x 10 ft room Resulting lead dust loading = 9,300 ug/ft 2 Current US Government Limit = 40 ug/ft 2
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Prohibited Paint Removal Methods Power Sanding Flame Torching Abrasive Blasting Methylene Chloride Paint Strippers
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Lead Paint Protections in the US Health-based exposure standards for paint, dust or soil Standard inspection or abatement protocols Prohibited paint removal methods Laboratory QA/QC Performance criteria for paint XRFs
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Lead Paint Protections (cont’d) Trained or licensed inspectorate or abatement work force Occupational standards to protect workers Training curricula Public education Disclosure of known lead paint hazards & no enforcement Funding to address hazards in low-income privately owned high risk housing
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Benefits of Window Replacement Lead Dust Accumulation Energy Savings: Heating and Cooling Housing Value Other?
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HUD Pb Paint Hazard Control Evaluation Blood Lead Declined 37% Source: NCHH, UC 2004
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Window Sill Lead Dust 12 Years After Abatement
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Floor Lead Dust 12 Years After Abatement
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Important Elements of US Approach 1.Research on Exposure Pathways (Lead as multi-media pollutant) 2.National and Local Surveillance on both Health and Housing Data is Essential 3.Guidelines, Legislation, Regulation & Enforcement 4.Education & Market-Based Approaches 5.Articulation of National Plan 6.Subsidy and Enforcement Targeted to Highest Risk 7.Evaluation of Exposure Control 8.High Cost of the Reactive Approach
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Case Report One House in New Orleans
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“Until effective standards for the domestic environment are devised, it is likely that children will continue to be employed as biological indicators of substandard housing.” Donald Barltrop, 1974
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Calling for a Global Ban on Lead Use in Residential Indoor and Outdoor Paints, Children’s Products, and All Nonessential Uses in Consumer Products Policy Date: 11/5/2007 Policy Number: LB-07-01
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David E. Jacobs, PhD, CIH Director of Research National Center for Healthy Housing 5025 Hawthorne PL NW Washington, DC 20016 202-607-0938 www.nchh.org dejacobs@starpower.net
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