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Pennsylvania
Statistics on children, youth and families in Pennsylvania from the Annie E. Casey Foundation and Pennsylvania Partnerships for Children
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Why This Indicator Matters
One way to ensure that our children thrive is to limit their exposure to toxins like lead. Research shows that there is no safe level of lead exposure – even the smallest amount can damage a child’s ability to learn. Young children are most at-risk of lead toxicity because of normal hand-to-mouth activities and because they more efficiently absorb lead than adults. This is why it is so important to ensure children are tested at a young age and referred as early as possible when they are exposed. Universal screening is indicated according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria and based on the higher prevalence of both elevated blood levels in Pennsylvania children and pre-1950 housing found in the Commonwealth (PA Department of Health, 2011 PA Child Lead Poisoning Elimination Plan).
Definition and Source
PROVIDER
Definition
The percent of children two years old who had one or more capillary or venous lead blood tests for lead poisoning prior to their second birthday.
Data Source
PPC's report & source documentation can be found at https://www.papartnerships.org/resources-publications/reports/#health-care.
Notes
This indicator was derived from a hybrid sampling methodology but the weighted average was computed to reflect the population of all children receiving public health care.
The year represents when the PPC or HEDIS reports were published.
Updated December 2022.
The year represents when the PPC or HEDIS reports were published.
Updated December 2022.
Last Updated
December 2022