Information About Lead Based
Paint
Lead-based paint is hazardous to your
health.
Lead-based paint is a major source of lead
poisoning for children and can also affect adults. In
children, lead poisoning can cause irreversible brain damage
and can impair mental functioning. It can retard mental and
physical development and reduce attention span. It can also
retard fetal development even at extremely low levels of lead.
In adults, it can cause irritability, poor muscle
coordination, and nerve damage to the sense organs and nerves
controlling the body. Lead poisoning may also cause problems
with reproduction (such as a decreased sperm count). It may
also increase blood pressure. Thus, young children, fetuses,
infants, and adults with high blood pressure are the most
vulnerable to the effects of lead.
Children should be screened for lead
poisoning.
In communities where the houses are old
and deteriorating, take advantage of available screening
programs offered by local health departments and have children
checked regularly to see if they are suffering from lead
poisoning. Because the early symptoms of lead poisoning are
easy to confuse with other illnesses, it is difficult to
diagnose lead poisoning without medical testing. Early
symptoms may include persistent tiredness, irritability, loss
of appetite, stomach discomfort, reduced attention span,
insomnia, and constipation. Failure to treat children in the
early stages can cause long-term or permanent health damage.
The current blood lead level which defines
lead poisoning is 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter of
blood. However, since poisoning may occur at lower levels than
previously thought, various federal agencies are considering
whether this level should be lowered further so that lead
poisoning prevention programs will have the latest information
on testing children for lead poisoning.
Consumers can be exposed to lead
from paint.
Eating paint chips is one way young
children are exposed to lead. It is not the most common way
that consumers, in general, are exposed to lead. Ingesting and
inhaling lead dust that is created as lead-based paint
"chalks," chips, or peels from deteriorated surfaces can
expose consumers to lead. Walking on small paint chips found
on the floor, or opening and closing a painted frame window,
can also create lead dust. Other sources of lead include
deposits that may be present in homes after years of use of
leaded gasoline and from industrial sources like smelting.
Consumers can also generate lead dust by sanding lead-based
paint or by scraping or heating lead-based paint.
Lead dust can settle on floors, walls, and
furniture. Under these conditions, children can ingest lead
dust from hand-to-mouth con- tact or in food. Settled lead
dust can re-enter the air through cleaning, such as sweeping
or vacuuming, or by movement of people throughout the
house.
Older homes may contain lead based
paint.
Lead was used as a pigment and drying
agent in "alkyd" oil based paint. "Latex" water based paints
generally have not contained lead. About two-thirds of the
homes built before 1940 and one-half of the homes built from
1940 to 1960 contain heavily-leaded paint. Some homes built
after 1960 also contain heavily-leaded paint. It may be on any
interior or exterior surface, particularly on woodwork, doors,
and windows. In 1978, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission lowered the legal maximum lead content in most
kinds of paint to 0.06% (a trace amount). Consider having the
paint in homes constructed before the 1980s tested for lead
before renovating or if the paint or underlying surface is
deteriorating. This is particularly important if infants,
children, or pregnant women are present.
Consumers can have paint tested for
lead.
There are do-it-yourself kits available.
However, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has not
evaluated any of these kits. One home test kit uses sodium
sulfide solution. This procedure requires you to place a drop
of sodium sulfide solution on a paint chip. The paint chip
slowly turns darker if lead is present. There are problems
with this test, however. Other metals may cause false positive
results, and resins in the paint may prevent the sulfide from
causing the paint chip to change color. Thus, the presence of
lead may not be correctly indicated. In addition the darkening
may be detected only on very light-colored paint.
Another in-home test requires a trained
professional who can operate the equipment safely. This test
uses X-ray fluorescence to determine if the paint contains
lead. Although the test can be done in your home, it should be
done only by professionals trained by the equipment
manufacturer or who have passed a state or local government
training course, since the equipment contains radioactive
materials. In addition, in some tests, the method has not been
reliable.
Consumers may choose to have a testing
laboratory test a paint sample for lead. Lab testing is
considered more reliable than other methods. Lab tests may
cost from $20 to $50 per sample. To have the lab test for lead
paint, consumers may:
·
Get sample containers from the lab or use
re-sealable plastic bags. Label the containers or bags with
the consumer's name and the location in the house from which
each paint sample was taken. Several samples should be taken
from each affected room (see HUD Guidelines discussed
below).
·
Use a sharp knife to cut through the edges of
the sample paint. The lab should tell you the size of the
sample needed. It will probably be about 2 inches by 2
inches.
·
Lift off the paint with a clean putty knife and
put it into the container. Be sure to take a sample of all
layers of paint, since only the lower layers may contain lead.
Do not include any of the underlying wood, plaster, metal, and
brick.
·
Wipe the surface and any paint dust with a wet
cloth or paper towel and discard the cloth or
towel.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) recommends that action to reduce exposure
should be taken when the lead in paint is greater than 0.5% by
lab testing or greater than 1.0 milligrams per square
centimeter by X-ray fluorescence. Action is especially
important when paint is deteriorating or when infants,
children, or pregnant women are present. Consumers can reduce
exposure to lead-based paint.
If you have lead-based
paint, you should take steps to reduce your
exposure to lead.
You
can:
1. Have the painted item
replaced.
You can replace a door or other easily
removed item if you can do it without creating lead dust.
Items that are difficult to remove should be replaced by
professionals who will control and contain lead dust.
2. Cover the lead-based
paint.
You can spray the surface with a sealant
or cover it with gypsum wallboard. However, painting over
lead-based paint with non-lead paint is not a long-term
solution. Even though the lead-based paint may be covered by
non-lead paint, the lead-based paint may continue to loosen
from the surface below and create lead dust. The new paint may
also partially mix with the lead-based paint, and lead dust
will be released when the new paint begins to
deteriorate.
3. Have the lead-based paint
removed.
Have professionals trained in removing
lead-based paint do this work. Each of the paint-removal
methods (sandpaper, scrapers, chemicals, sandblasters, and
torches or heat guns) can produce lead fumes or dust. Fumes or
dust can become airborne and be inhaled or ingested. Wet
methods help reduce the amount of lead dust. Removing
moldings, trim, window sills, and other painted surfaces for
professional paint stripping outside the home may also create
dust. Be sure the professionals contain the lead dust.
Wet-wipe all surfaces to remove any dust or paint chips.
Wet-clean the area before re-entry.
You can remove a small amount of
lead-based paint if you can avoid creating any dust. Make sure
the surface is less than about one square foot (such as a
window sill). Any job larger than about one square foot should
be done by professionals. Make sure you can use a wet method
(such as a liquid paint stripper).
4. Reduce lead dust
exposure.
You can periodically wet mop and wipe
surfaces and floors with a high phosphorous (at least 5%)
cleaning solution. Wear waterproof gloves to prevent skin
irritation. Avoid activities that will disturb or damage lead
based paint and create dust. This is a preventive measure and
is not an alternative to replacement or removal.
Contact your state and local health
departments lead poisoning prevention programs and housing
authorities for information about testing labs and contractors
who can safely remove lead-based paint. The U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) prepared guidelines for
removing lead-based paint. Ask contractors about
their qualifications, experience removing lead-based paint,
and plans to follow these
guidelines.