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Lead Prevention Home INDIANA LEAD AND HEALTHY HOMES PROGRAM

National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week 2011, October 23-29

In honor of National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week, the following cities have issued proclamations: Elkhart, Evansville, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, and South Bend. Please click on the city name to see the proclamation. For information on lead screening events in your area, please contact your local health department.  

New Report Released: Safety and Health in Manufactured Structures

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, released a report on Safety and Health in Manufactured Structures. View the report here

Candy Recall

Circle City Marketing and Distributing, doing business as Candy Dynamics, Indianapolis, IN, is issuing a voluntary recall of all Toxic Waste® brand Nuclear Sludge® products, all flavors, 0.3 oz (8 g) size pieces. The product is imported from Pakistan. Read more...

Arsenic and Lead Poisoning Alert

Two digestive aids commonly used by children of Burmese refugees in Fort Wayne have tested high for lead and arsenic. Read more...

Radon Testing

For a free short-term radon test kit, contact the American Lung Association.

Our Mission

The mission of the Indiana Indiana Lead and Healthy Homes Program (ILHHP) is to eliminate the incidence of childhood lead poisoning in Indiana. This is being accomplished through screening for lead poisoned children, treatment of children who are lead poisoned, follow-up case management, and the remediation of the environmental causes of the disease.

Lead poisoning is a silent menace which often does not manifest itself until the damage is done. The disease can permanently and irreversibly damage the developing brains and other organs of young children.  Serious effects can include lowered intelligence, behavior disorder, and slowed physical development. Once poisoned, a young child’s chances for academic, social and occupational success are significantly diminished.

Deteriorated lead-based paint in the child’s home environment is the primary source of lead poisoning. Young children, who are most vulnerable to the effects of lead poisoning, pick up lead dust from the floor and ingest it through hand to mouth activity.  In recent years other sources of lead poisoning have come to light.  Consumer products, such as children’s toys or inexpensive jewelry, often imported from countries where there are few restrictions on the use of lead, have resulted in some notorious cases of lead poisoning and even death. Still, any child living in a house built prior to 1978 is at the greatest risk of lead poisoning.  The older the home the more likely there is lead paint.

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