At a glance
ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø’s Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP) is dedicated to eliminating childhood lead poisoning as a public health problem. The program is strengthening blood lead testing, reporting, and surveillance, linking exposed children to recommended services, and targeted population-based interventions.
Overview
Since its inception in the early 1990s, CLPPP has:
- Funded more than 60 state and local childhood lead poisoning prevention programs to develop, implement, and evaluate local lead poisoning prevention activities
- Provided technical assistance to support development of statewide lead screening plans
- Developed and maintained the Childhood Blood Lead Surveillance System through which funded programs report data to ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø
- Developed and maintained the Healthy Homes Lead Poisoning Surveillance Software platform used by state and local health departments for blood lead surveillance and case management activities
- Trained more than 100 public health professionals a year through the ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø Lead Poisoning Prevention Training Center.
- Collaborated with federal, state, and local partners to develop outreach materials for National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week, held the last week of October each year
- Supported forming collaborative relationships between ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø's funded partners and other lead poisoning prevention organizations and agencies (e.g., community-based, nonprofit, and housing groups)
- Fostered agreements between state and local health departments and state Medicaid agencies to link surveillance and Medicaid data
- Expanded public health laboratory capacity in states to analyze blood and environmental samples and to ensure quality, timely, and accurate analysis of results
- Published and case management guidelines that provide health departments and health care providers with standards to identify and manage children with lead in their blood
In 2021, ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø's Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP) of funding childhood lead poisoning prevention programs. This work has been dedicated to eliminating childhood lead poisoning as a public health problem.
Learn more about the history of major scientific and public health events in childhood lead poisoning prevention through CLPPP's timeline.
Background
ÐÇ¿ÕÓéÀÖ¹ÙÍø's program to eliminate childhood lead poisoning in the U. S. was authorized under the .
The program's primary responsibilities are to:
- Develop programs and policies to prevent childhood lead poisoning
- Educate the public and health care providers about childhood lead poisoning prevention
- Support state and local health departments to
- Determine the extent of childhood lead poisoning by screening children for lead in their blood
- Help ensure children with lead in their blood receive appropriate medical and environmental follow-up
- Develop population-based efforts to prevent childhood lead poisoning
- Determine the extent of childhood lead poisoning by screening children for lead in their blood
- Conduct research to determine the effectiveness of prevention efforts at federal, state, and local levels