In many states, environmental lead hazards are evaluated only after a lead-poisoned child has been identified. This passive approach is problematic because only a small fraction of children are tested for lead and those with elevated blood lead levels may have irreversible developmental damage. In order to reverse this paradigm, a new lead screening kit was developed. In this study, we validated the accuracy of the kit compared to the conventional methods. Forty-five participants used the kit to collect 3 dust, 3 soil and 2 paint samples in their homes. A researcher performed an in-situ analysis of the lead content in the paint and soil using a portable X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometer. The soil, paint, and dust samples collected by the participants were then analyzed by XRF ex-situ. A strong linear correlation was found between the in-situ and ex-situ measurements for soil and dust samples, and a reasonable correlation was obtained for lead content of paint samples. The kit had very high degrees of specificity (true negative rate) and sensitivity (true positive rate) for detecting hazardous levels of lead in soil and dust samples. The agreement was more moderate for paint samples because some of the paint chips provided gave different readings from the front or back surface, but in-situ XRF only reads from the front surface. Overall, the kit gave a sensitivity of 87%, a specificity of 98% and an accuracy of 96% for detection of environmental lead hazards in samples collected from the home by untrained citizens. This suggests that widespread and inexpensive lead screening could be used to successfully identify hazards and ultimately decrease environmental lead exposure in children.
Keywords: Citizen science; Dust; Lead; Paint; Screening kit validation; Soil.
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