Community Setting

Reducing Environmental Exposures in Child Care Facilities: A Review of State Policy

This report, prepared by the Environmental Law Institute and the Children’s Environmental Health Network, provides an overview of how state policy addresses indoor environmental exposures in the child care setting. The report describes the state of state policy today and highlights notable examples to assist policymakers, agency officials, non-governmental organizations and associations, and others who work to advance quality child care and promote children’s health.

The child care environment is vitally important to the healthy development of millions of young children who receive care outside their homes.  Along with creating a safe, nurturing, and stimulating child care program, protecting children from exposure to indoor environmental contaminants is critical to advancing the core goals of early care and education.  Children are not simply “little adults” when it comes to environmental exposures – they may be more highly exposed to pollutants and more vulnerable to their effects.

This report, prepared by the Environmental Law Institute and the Children’s Environmental Health Network, provides an overview of how state policy addresses indoor environmental exposures in the child care setting.  While there has been considerable progress in establishing policies to address key indoor contaminants, there is ample room for strengthening state laws, regulations, and non-regulatory initiatives.  The report describes the state of state policy today and highlights notable examples to assist policymakers, agency officials, non-governmental organizations and associations, and others who work to advance quality child care and promote children’s health.

The report includes the following chapters:

  • Introduction
  • Environmental Tobacco Smoke
  • Radon
  • Carbon Monoxide Alarms
  • Mold and Dampness
  • Building Ventilation and Temperature
  • Pesticides
  • Lead-Based Paint
  • Asbestos
  • Other Chemical Exposures: Cleaning, Renovation, and Consumer Products
  • Facility Site/Location
  • State Non-Regulatory Initiatives: Education, Assistance, and Incentives
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix: Where to Find State Statutes and Regulations Online

To learn more and download the full report visit: http://www.eli.org/buildings/reducing-environmental-exposures-child-care-facilities

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EPA Asthma Team
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Neighborhood poverty, urban residence, race/ethnicity, and asthma: Rethinking the inner-city asthma epidemic

A new study challenges the widely held belief that inner-city children have a higher risk of asthma simply because of where they live. Race, ethnicity and income have much stronger effects on asthma risk than where children live, the Johns Hopkins Children's Center researchers reported. The investigators looked at more than 23,000 children, aged 6 to 17, across the United States and found that asthma rates were 13 percent among inner-city children and 11 percent among those in suburban or rural areas. But that small difference vanished once other variables were factored in, according to the study published online Jan. 20 in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. Poverty increased the risk of asthma, as did being from certain racial/ethnic groups. Asthma rates were 20 percent for Puerto Ricans, 17 percent for blacks, 10 percent for whites, 9 percent for other Hispanics, and 8 percent for Asians, the study found.

Background: Although it is thought that inner-city areas have a high burden of asthma, the prevalence of asthma in inner cities across the United States is not known.

Objective: We sought to estimate the prevalence of current asthma in US children living in inner-city and non–inner-city areas and to examine whether urban residence, poverty, or race/ethnicity are the main drivers of asthma disparities. Methods: The National Health Interview Survey 2009-2011 was linked by census tract to data from the US Census and the National Center for Health Statistics. Multivariate logistic regression models adjusted for sex; age; race/ethnicity; residence in an urban, suburban, medium metro, or small metro/rural area; poverty; and birth outside the United States, with current asthma and asthma morbidity as outcome variables. Inner-city areas were defined as urban areas with 20% or more of households at below the poverty line. Results: We included 23,065 children living in 5,853 census tracts. The prevalence of current asthma was 12.9% in inner-city and 10.6% in non–inner-city areas, but this difference was not significant after adjusting for race/ethnicity, region, age, and sex. In fully adjusted models black race, Puerto Rican ethnicity, and lower household income but not residence in poor or urban areas were independent risk factors for current asthma. Household poverty increased the risk of asthma among non-Hispanics and Puerto Ricans but not among other Hispanics. Associations with asthma morbidity were very similar to those with prevalent asthma. Conclusions: Although the prevalence of asthma is high in some inner-city areas, this is largely explained by demographic factors and not by living in an urban neighborhood.

 

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Nuevo Reparar el Aire al Interior del Hogar, la Escuela y al Jugar

Material educativo que ayuda a familias con alergias y asma a eliminar los alérgenos que causan síntomas al interior del hogar, la escuela o en os lugares donde el niño juega.

Allergy & Asthma Network Mothers of Asthmatics (AANMA) quiere compartir con ustedes la versión actualizada de la publicación "Reparar el aire al interior del hogar, la escuela y al jugar", un material educativo para toda la familia que enseña cómo eliminar alérgenos al interior del hogar, la escuela y donde el niño juega para mejorar los síntomas de alergia y asma y vivir una mejor calidad de vida. Si quieres más copias para entregar a pacientes o a familias con asma, por favor escribe a mgieminiani@aanma.org.

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Contact Name: 
Marcela Gieminiani
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mgieminiani@AANMA.ORG
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7036419595
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