Identifying Residential Hazards Using Home Test Kits

The recruitment status of this study is unknown because the information has not been verified recently.
Verified January 2006 by National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS).
Recruitment status was  Recruiting
Sponsor:
Information provided by:
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT00285532
First received: February 1, 2006
Last updated: NA
Last verified: January 2006
History: No changes posted

February 1, 2006
February 1, 2006
October 2001
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No Changes Posted
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Identifying Residential Hazards Using Home Test Kits
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The purpose of this project is to help families and communities identify and reduce health risks from lead, pesticides and, ultimately, other environmental hazards. We have partnered with the Better Housing League and Baby’s Milk Fund in Cincinnati and nationally with the Alliance to End Childhood Lead Poisoning and the National Center for Lead Safe Housing. The first specific aim of this project is to evaluate a sampling kit for families to assess levels of lead and pesticides in their home environment. This aim will strengthen right-to-know laws by providing families with tools to assess environmental contamination in their own homes. The second aim is to increase community awareness of the role of environmental agents in developmental disorders, hearing loss and school problems.

A cross-sectional random, stratified study design will be used for this project. All children who are younger than 5 years of age and have a venipuncture blood sample taken at the babies Milk Fund Clinic will be eligible for this study. After checking the lists for errors and duplications, we will randomly permute the sampling frame, stratifying on children’s blood lead concentration. Stratification will be used to enroll about 33% of the sample with blood lead concentrations below 5 mg/dl, 33% between 5 to 10 mg/dl, and 33% of 10 mg/dl or higher. Stratifying the sample will improve our chances of testing the predictive validity of home sampling kits to identify children who have blood lead concentration > 10 mg/dl collected by families. In addition this study will:

  1. Develop a pesticide wipe sampling kit to accompany our lead-sampling kit.
  2. Evaluate the predictive validity of home sampling kits for lead-contaminated floor dust to identify children who have blood lead levels of 10 mg/dl or higher by community participants compared with repeat samples taken by trained, community workers.
  3. Evaluate the reliability of home sampling kits for pesticides in dust collected by community participants compared with trained, community workers.
  4. Disseminate data on the reliability of home sampling tests and provide tools for families to collect environmental samples for large, population-based studies.
  5. Develop a Healthy Homes Resource Center at the Better Housing League to disseminate information to the community about residential hazards.
Observational
Allocation: Random Sample
Primary Purpose: Screening
Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
Time Perspective: Prospective
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Lead Poisoning
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*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT Number) in Medline.
 
Recruiting
150
March 2006
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Inclusion Criteria:

Venous blood lead In residence 3 months Child less than 5 years of age Sampler greater than 18 years of age

Exclusion Criteria:

Cannot read or understand English Physically unable to conduct field sampling Outside of theGreater Cincinnati area

Both
3 Months to 5 Years
Yes
Contact: Sandy M Roda, BS 513-558-1705 rodasm@ucmail.uc.edu
Contact: Bruce P Lanphear, MD, MPH 513-636-3778 bruce.lanphear@cchmc.org
United States
 
NCT00285532
11261-CP-002
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National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
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Principal Investigator: Sandy M Roda, BS University of Cincinnati
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
January 2006

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP