2008 Holiday Gift Guide
a discovery company

Detox Your Home: Detect, Remove Lead Paint

Jasmin Malik Chua, Jersey City, USA

Jasmin Malik Chua

By Jasmin Malik Chua
Jersey City, NJ, USA | Sun Mar 23 17:21:00 EDT 2008

Sorry, parental units, but discovering traces of lead in your kids' toys is the least of your problems with this neurotoxin. More than 80 percent of American homes built before 1978, or roughly 64 million, contain lead paint, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). And it's not only chipping and peeling paint you have to watch out for-lead-paint dust from walls, windowsills, woodwork, and other surfaces can be inhaled or ingested after coming into contact with your hands, placing exuberant little explorers (and chewers, especially) at deadly risk.

We've put together a step-by-step guide to determining if lead is present in your home, and what do if it rears its ugly head. 1. Have your paint tested: Although home test kits are widely available, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission recently rejected most of them as unreliable, especially if the lead in the sample was covered with a non-leaded coating. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) screening, a technology available to professional inspectors, however, produced significantly more-accurate results.

Call the The National Lead Information Center and Clearinghouse (NLICC) at 800-LEAD-FYI or visit its Web site for a list of EPA-certified labs you can send paint chips for testing.

2. Test your children: If you suspect your kids have been exposed to high levels of lead, take them to a doctor to get tested, especially if they're under a year old. Blood lead tests for kids are usually covered under health insurance or Medicaid; some cities even offer these tests for free. Children with blood lead levels above 10 µg/dl (micrograms per deciliter) will need follow-up care.

Tip: Children with nutritional deficiencies of iron, calcium, and zinc are more susceptible to lead poisoning, so a balanced diet of grains, fruits, and vegetables is essential.

3. Find a lead-abatement specialist: If lead is detected, contact NLICC, the American Industrial Hygiene Association, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, or your regional EPA office for a list of licensed lead-removal experts. Depending on circumstances, the professional may recommend installing paneling or drywall, or applying encapsulation, which is a thick-bodied, protective layer of paint. Ideally, you and your family should stay somewhere else while the cleanup is in progress.

Tip: If you live in public housing, and lead paint is detected in your apartment, the housing authority has to fix the problem within 14 days, or move your family into a lead-free apartment.

4. Wash and wipe down surfaces: Meanwhile, wet-mop floors and wipe windows and other contaminated surfaces with trisodium phosphate or another high-phosphate detergent-note, however, that although phosphate picks up lead, it has serious environmental impacts, especially on marine life, and shouldn't be used for regular cleaning.

Besides washing your kids' hands after they play, before they eat, and before bedtime, be sure to launder their toys with detergent regularly and rinse them well. Also, put brooms and conventional vacuums aside for now, as they'll only scatter dust into the air. Instead, use vacuum cleaners equipped with High Energy Particulate (HEPA) filters.

Difficulty level: Moderate

 
  • email
  • digg
  • share
  • print
helpful article? vote for it
{ }
close window

CLOSE X

 

comments on this article

view all post a comment

 
 

from our partners

 
 
 

how to go green

View All

Votes

How to Go Green: Home Electronics
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Home Buying
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Home Heating
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Electricity
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Rental Properties
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Weddings
  COMMENTS

{}

 
Greensburg image
 

tv schedule

view all

On Now

On Tonight

 
Channel Finder Planet Green
 

buying guides

View All

Votes

Buy Green: East Coast Beer
  COMMENTS

{}

Buy Green: Thanksgiving Turkey
  COMMENTS

{}

Buy Green: Desktop Computers
  COMMENTS

{}

Buy Green: Laptop and Notebook Computers
  COMMENTS

{}

 

today on planet green

view all

Votes

recent
discussed

World's Greenest Homes Episode: Eco Manor
POSTED  8 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Emeril Green Episode: A Meal to Remember
POSTED  9 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Stuff Happens: No Butts for Mother Nature (Video)
POSTED  10 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Get Deep Sleep Naturally During this Stressful Holiday Season
POSTED  10 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

How to Go Green: Cocktails
POSTED  10 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Go Paperless for Thanksgiving Dinner
POSTED  25 Nov 2008. 4 COMMENTS.

{2}

Buy Green: East Coast Beer
POSTED  18 Nov 2008. 3 COMMENTS.

{3}

World's Greenest Homes Episode: Chicago House
POSTED  25 Nov 2008. 9 COMMENTS.

{13}

Pass Up Fast Food on Road Trips
POSTED  24 Nov 2008. 3 COMMENTS.

{3}

Replace Risky Hot Dogs with Grass-Fed Franks
POSTED  19 Nov 2008. 2 COMMENTS.

{5}

 
 
 

Ads by Google