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  2. Indoor Air Quality (IAQ)

Lead's Impact on Indoor Air Quality

Lead has long been recognized as a harmful environmental pollutant. Lead is particularly dangerous to children because their growing bodies absorb more lead than adults do and their brains and nervous systems are more sensitive to the damaging effects of lead. Babies and young children can also be more highly exposed to lead because they often put their hands and other objects that can have lead from dust or soil on them into their mouths. Children may also be exposed to lead by eating and drinking food or water containing lead or from dishes or glasses that contain lead, inhaling lead dust from lead-based paint or lead-contaminated soil or from playing with toys with lead paint. Before it was known how harmful lead could be, it was used in paint, gasoline, water pipes, and many other products.

Old lead-based paint is the most significant source of lead exposure in the U.S. today. Harmful exposures to lead can be created when lead-based paint is improperly removed from surfaces by dry scraping, sanding, or open-flame burning. High concentrations of airborne lead particles in homes can also result from lead dust from outdoor sources, including contaminated soil tracked inside, and use of lead in certain indoor activities such as soldering and stained-glass making.

To learn more about lead, how to protect your family, or find information for contractors, visit EPA's Lead page.

Indoor Air Quality (IAQ)

  • Learn about Indoor Air Quality
    • Introduction to IAQ
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Contact Us about Indoor Air Quality
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on August 27, 2024
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