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Lead screenings in Maine

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Why This Indicator Matters

According to the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention, protecting children from exposure to lead is important to lifelong good health. There is no safe level of lead in a person’s blood. Even low levels of lead in blood have been shown to affect IQ, ability to pay attention, and academic achievement. The most important step parents, doctors, and others can take is to prevent lead exposure before it occurs.  CDC Fact Sheet on elevated lead levels in children

Maine law implemented in June 2019 requires blood lead tests for all children at 1 and 2 years of age. The latest federal CDC guidelines reduced the blood reference value (BLRV)—the measure used to determine when interventions are needed—from 5 μg/dL to 3.5 μg/dL as even lower levels are now understood as unsafe.
      What the data shows:
In 2022, 68.5% of Maine's children ages 12 to 24 months were screened for blood lead, up from 63.6% the year before, and up significantly from 51.2% in 2018 before the law took effect.  The 8,570 children screened in 2022 was 2,107 more one-year-olds than in 2018. 

For 2022, Cumberland County achieved the highest level of lead screenings at 82.4% of children ages 12 to 24 months. Six other counties – Franklin, , Kennebec, Knox, Washington, Androscoggin and Aroostook had rates at or above 70% of children in the age group. Counties with rates under 50% for lead screening for children ages 12 months to 24 months were Piscataquis, (32.0%), Hancock (44.4%) and Waldo (48.6%).
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Definition and Source

PROVIDER

Definition

A lead screening blood test measures the level of lead in a child's blood stream. State law now requires lead screenings both at age 1 (12-24 months) and at age 2 (24- 36 months). This indicator displays the number and percent of lead screenings for children ages 12 to 24 months. For percent of screenings, the numerator is the estimated number of children ages 12 to 24 months who received lead screenings and the denominator is the number of children ages 12 to 24 months. Note that a blood lead test is considered a "screening test" only when a child has no prior history of a confirmed blood lead at or above 5 micrograms per deciliter (ug/dL). 

Notes

The latest federal CDC guidelines reduced the blood reference value (BLRV)—the measure used to determine when interventions are needed—from 5 μg/dL to 3.5 μg/dL as even lower levels are now understood as unsafe, however, the data posted to the Maine Tracking Network through 2022 does not use this newer threshold.

Last Updated

February 2024