Research shows that lead risk varies by Cleveland school

- Despite Medicaid rules that mandate testing at ages 1 and 2, only half of the children on Medicaid in Cuyahoga County were tested at age 1 and only 34 percent were tested at 2.
- Of 11,560 children born in Cuyahoga County in 2012 and screened at least once by age 5, 1,237 children (10.7 percent) had an elevated blood lead level by age 5. Most of these children lived in Cleveland.
- Children with elevated lead levels are much less likely than their peers to score on track for language and literacy on the kindergarten readiness assessment, even after controlling for a range of background factors.
Facing headwinds
Those findings dovetail with another Mandel School study, running simultaneously that shows the number of Cleveland children who arrive at kindergarten having already had an elevated blood lead level. That study examined more than 10,000 kindergartners entering Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) schools over a three-year period, reporting the proportion of students with a history of elevated lead levels by school. School enrollment records were matched to lead-testing data from the Ohio Department of Health from 2008-2016. The report highlights the disparity in lead exposure by Cleveland neighborhood and school. “Generally, schools with a greater prevalence of kindergartners with lead histories are located in proximity to neighborhoods that also have high rates of children with elevated blood lead levels. Students reflect the lead risk in the neighborhoods their school draws from,” said Fischer. Cleveland has markedly higher lead exposure among children compared to many other communities, due to the city’s aging housing stock and poverty levels, according to the report. The primary threat of lead exposure to children comes from leaded paint in deteriorating homes built before 1978. Children can be exposed to lead when leaded paint chips and/or dust is inhaled or ingested. Childhood lead exposure has been linked to a variety of negative health and behavioral problems. Lead impacts a child’s IQ and cognitive development, executive functioning and self-control—not to mention lower performance on school-readiness assessments and early grade proficiency tests, already well-documented in medical and research literature. Additional highlights from the report include:- About one-fourth of kindergartners in the CMSD have a history of elevated lead in their blood.
- There is wide variation by school in the percentage of entering children that have a history of an elevated lead level, reflecting underlying neighborhood differences in lead exposure.
- Schools with higher proportions of kindergartners with an elevated lead history may face particular challenges in meeting their educational needs.
For more information, contact Colin McEwen at colin.mcewen@case.edu