A state law mandates lead contamination testing for all children under 4 and requires evidence of testing for kids entering kindergarten. These kids graduated Peabody School kindergarten in 2013. Credit: Nesson Marshall
A state law mandates lead contamination testing for all children under 4 and requires evidence of testing for kids entering kindergarten. These kids graduated Peabody School kindergarten in 2013. (Photo: Nesson Marshall)
A state law mandates lead contamination testing for all children under 4 and requires evidence of testing for kids entering kindergarten. These kids graduated Peabody School kindergarten in 2013. (Photo: Nesson Marshall)

Cambridge health officials want to get more kids tested for lead, but have no authority to enforce a state law that mandates testing for all children under 4 and requires evidence of ย testing for kids entering kindergarten, according to a statement issued Thursday by the cityโ€™s Public Health Department.

The department released the statement after Cambridge Day reported that about 20 percent of Cambridge children under 4 arenโ€™t getting the required tests. A reporter had asked about the testing gaps in April.

The cityโ€™s lead testing performance beats the statewide average by a few percentage points โ€“ last year, 80 percent in Cambridge versus 76 percent statewide โ€“ but the health department โ€œwould like for the [Cambridge] screening rate to be higher,โ€ the statement said.

To this end, the city intends to participate in an effort to raise testing levels statewide, the statement said. According to the Cambridge officials, the state Department of Public Health intends to add lead testing requirements for kids going into licensed daycare or pre-school programs, in addition to kindergarten. The state will also mail lead testing โ€œreport cardsโ€ to all pediatricians informing them of the testing mandates and disclosing testing performance in their communities. The state is also โ€œcreating other educational materials for medical providers and families that will emphasize the importance of screening,โ€ according to Cambridge.

โ€œThe Cambridge Health Department intends to work with the state to promote this program locally,โ€ the statement said.

Again according to the city, state health officials already โ€œreach out to pediatricians and the local board of healthโ€ in any community that โ€œhas a low rate of screening or is a high risk for lead poisoning.โ€

Omar Cabrera, a spokesman for the state agency, did not respond to questions about the issue last month and again Thursday.

The lead problem

Lead can cause lifelong deficits in thinking, behavior and academic performance, and scientists say there is no safe blood level for children. Early screening is important to alert parents, doctors and community officials to prevent further exposure to lead, by taking actions such as testing homes and surrounding soil for lead paint; having children wash their hands before eating; and feeding kids foods high in calcium and iron.

Lead contamination of drinking water has been in the news recently since scientists and residents of Flint, Mich., discovered extraordinarily high lead levels in city water caused by a decision to switch to cheaper water from the Flint River. Cambridge has its own reservoir water treatment, but drought conditions and low rainfall has caused the city to start buying and introducing Massachusetts Water Resources Authority into Cambridgeโ€™s system starting Tuesday, with $3.6 million quarterly requests for funding from the City Council. The drought is predicted to end in the fall of 2017.

The cityโ€™s statement said lead-testing figures for kids in Cambridge and other communities might have underestimated performance because children who hadnโ€™t received all required tests in one year โ€“ and so were not counted as having been tested โ€“ might have gotten their final test the next year, when they would be counted. The cityโ€™s level has varied between 73 percent and 86 percent from 2010 to late 2015.

The state law requiring children to present evidence of lead testing before entering kindergarten doesnโ€™t exclude them from school if they donโ€™t meet the standard and has no other enforcement mechanism, the city said. The School Health Program doesnโ€™t keep statistics on the number of incoming kindergarteners who donโ€™t show that theyโ€™ve been tested, but school nurses โ€œfollow upโ€ with some kids who have not received tests.

ย Next up in regulation

The stateโ€™s proposed changes in lead testing regulations donโ€™t include new enforcement measures relating to school or preschool entrance, according to the proposal posted on the state health department website. As the rules are written, itโ€™s doctors, clinics and โ€œhealth maintenance organizationsโ€ that must test children under 6 at required intervals.

The new regulations do require followup testing and other services for children who exceed the latest โ€œlevel of concernโ€ of 5 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood, or 50 parts per billion.

The city runs a lead poisoning prevention program that helps families in Cambridge and 33 other communities, the cityโ€™s statement said. It mostly serves kids referred by a doctor or the stateโ€™s Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, but also responds to questions from other families, the city said. Health department workers also speak about lead poisoning prevention at community events and in programs targeted to immigrants and homeless families.

A stronger

Please consider making a financial contribution to maintain, expand and improve Cambridge Day.

We are now a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and all donations are tax deductible.

Please consider a recurring contribution.

Sue Reinert is a Cambridge resident who writes on housing and health issues. She is a longtime reporter who wrote on health care for The Patriot Ledger in Quincy.

Leave a comment