Children's Health Protection News Archive
Potential Environmental Hazards
Where Children Live, Learn, and Play
Health Topics
Important Dates
Agency News
Archived News by Date
Potential Environmental Hazards
- Product Recall: Beaded Photo Charm Bracelet
- Product Recall: Little Tikes Co. Animal-Shaped Flashlights Sold at Target
- Product Recall: Art Accentz™ Changlz™ Metal Charms
- Product Recall: Mizuno USA, Inc. Recalls "Gamer" Baseball Gloves
- Product Recall: Stravina Children’s Metal Necklaces and Zipper Pulls
- Product Recall: Certain Cribs Sold at Toys R Us Stores
- Product Recall: Necklace and Earring Costume Jewelry Sets
- Product Recall: Disney Children’s Red Sunglasses
- Product Recall: Metal Charms
- Product Recall: Children's Costume Bracelets
- On January 26, 2006, EPA announced the development of the “3Ts for Reducing Lead in Drinking Water at Schools and Childcare Facilities Toolkit,” which contains materials to help schools and childcare centers reduce lead in drinking water.
- On December 29, 2005, EPA proposed new requirements for contractors and construction professionals when working in homes that contain lead-based paint. The proposed requirements seek to reduce lead poisonings in children across the country. EPA is proposing that contractors must be trained in the use of lead-safe work practices, renovators and firms be certified, providers of renovation training be accredited, and renovators follow protective work practice standards. EPA will take public comment for 90 days following publication of the proposal in the Federal Register. For more information or to obtain copies of the proposal and supporting materials, visit: www.epa.gov/lead/pubs/renovat ion.htm.
- On December 6, 2005, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) released "The Decontamination of
Children: Preparedness and Response for Hospital Emergency Departments," a
27-minute video that trains emergency responders and hospital emergency
department staff to decontaminate children after being exposed to hazardous
chemicals during a bioterrorist attack or other disaster. A short clip of the
video can be found online at www.ahrq.gov/resear
ch/deconVideo/decon512k.ram
. A free, single copy of the video may be ordered by calling
(800) 358-9295 or by sending an e-mail to ahrqpubs@ahrq.gov. - A study described in the November 2005 issue of Environmental Health
Perspectives took a close look at in utero exposure to dioxins and
polychlorinated biphenyls. The results of the study suggest routine screening
of thyroid hormone levels and thyroid function in newborns. View the
article
. - On November 9, 2005, EPA launched a new Spanish Web page dedicated to providing information on different environmental issues and their effects among Hispanics residing in the United States. The new page, "El medio ambiente y su salud," The Environment and Your Health, will focus on a different issue every month. This month’s key issue is asthma and includes general information about the disease, its environmental triggers, asthma FAQs, and environmental health studies of Hispanics and asthma.
- EPA and the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) are conducting a two-year study of the effectiveness of sealants in preventing leaching of arsenic from CCA-treated wood. The study is attempting to determine whether or not the application of different wood sealants on CCA-treated wood has effects on the amount of CCA residues to which an individual may be exposed. For more information about the study and interim results, visit EPA's Chromated Copper Arsenate (CCA) page.
- EPA’s Pesticide Fate Database, which provides information about what happens to pesticides after they are used in the environment, is now available online. The database allows you to search, sort, and retrieve up-to-date pesticide fate and chemistry information. This information can be used to assess pesticide exposure for ecological risk assessments and drinking water exposure assessments.
- Product Recall:
Children’s
Necklaces

- Product Recall:
Toy Jewelry
Sold in Vending Machines

- EPA has improved its chromated copper arsenate (CCA) Web page to make information easier to find. CCA is a chemical wood preservative containing chromium, copper and arsenic. Visit the new CCA page at www.epa.gov/pesticides/antimicrobials/reregistration/cca/.
- Toxicity and Exposure Assessment for Children's Health (TEACH) is an EPA project that complements existing information on health risks to children from exposure to chemicals in the environment. TEACH consolidates children's health information from scientific literature and improves access to that information through an interactive Web site. The Web site includes a searchable database and Chemical Summary Forms.
- EPA and National Urban League Kick Off Children's Health
Month by Joining Forces To Protect Children from Environmental Health
Risks
On September 29, 2004, EPA signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the National Urban League to work together on protecting children in socioeconomically disadvantaged communities from environmental health risks. Children in these communities may be disproportionately affected by environmental hazards. Each October, EPA commemorates Children's Health Month, which is designed to increase public awareness and provide tools that the general public, health care providers, environmental professionals and businesses can use to help protect children from environmental health risks. Learn more about the EPA and National Urban League partnership or download the Memorandum of Understanding (PDF/687K). - A new Children's Environmental Health Center at Harvard School of
Public
Health will develop an integrated approach to the study of the
mixture of toxic
metals at the Tar Creek Superfund Site in Oklahoma and their
potential effects
on the neurological, behavioral, and mental development of children
living in
the area. For more information, visit: www.nih.gov/news/pr/jul20
04/nie
hs-07.htm
. - On March 19, 2004, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced their joint consumer advisory on methylmercury in fish and shellfish for reducing the exposure to high levels of mercury in women who may become pregnant, pregnant women, nursing mothers, and young children. The FDA and EPA want to emphasize the benefits of eating fish - consumers should know that fish and shellfish can be important parts of a healthy and balanced diet. However, as a matter of prudence, women might wish to modify the amount and type of fish they consume if they are planning to become pregnant, pregnant, nursing, or feeding a young child. To view the new advisory, visit www.epa.gov/ost/fish.
- Counterfeit pesticide products for dogs and cats have been found at retailers across the country. EPA has ordered pesticide distributors and retailers in many states to stop selling counterfeit pet pesticide products that falsely contain EPA Registration numbers and labeling for the "Advantage" and "Frontline" brands of pesticides. The counterfeit products have outer cartons that are made to resemble EPA registered pesticides. Inside the cartons are applicators labeled and packaged for overseas markets. In some cases, the pesticide applicators may not have the proper child-resistant packaging or the accompanying instructional leaflet is missing. Counterfeit products should be disposed of according to procedures for other household chemicals. Pet owners concerned their pet may be affected by counterfeit products should contact their veterinarian. For information and photos, visit www.epa.gov/pesti cides/factsheets/petproduct.htm or contact David Deegan at EPA at (617) 918-1017 or deegan.dave@epa.gov.
- PRODUCT RECALL: CHILDREN'S RINGS. The U.S.
Consumer Products Safety Commission and Brand Imports LLC, Scottsdale,
Ariz.
are alerting consumers to the recall of children's rings that are
silver in
color with shapes including hearts and stars, with slashes of
colored paint.
The rings were sold at vending machines in malls, discount
department and
grocery stores nationwide from December 2002 through August
2003 for
about 25
cents. The rings contain high levels of lead, posing a risk of
lead poisoning
to young children. Consumers should throw the ring away or contact
the company
for more information. For more information and to view a picture,
see: http://www.cpsc.go
v/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml04/04090.html
.
- PRODUCT RECALL: CARBON MONOXIDE ALARMS. The U.S.
Consumer
Products Safety Commission and GE Security, Inc. are alerting
consumers to the
recall of carbon monoxide (CO) alarms made in
China by "SENTROL," (a former name of the company). The CO
alarms
were sold by distributors, dealers and installers of security systems
nationwide from
November 2000 through October 2003. The CO alarms fail to detect
carbon
monoxide after 1 year of operation due to an internal software
error.
These CO alarms do not provide an "end of life" signal or
other
indication of inoperability, even if the test button is depressed.
For more
information and to view a picture, see: www.cpsc.gov/cpscp
ub/prerel/prhtml04/04534.html
. - PRODUCT RECALL: COLORED SIDEWALK CHALK SOLD IN TARGET
STORES. The U.S.
Consumer Products Safety Commission and
Target Stores are alerting parents to
the recall of multicolored
chalk made in
Hong Kong by Agglo Inc. The chalk was sold by Target from March
2003 to July
2003 and contains high levels of lead. For more information and to
view
pictures, see:
http://cpsc.gov/cpscpu
b/prerel/prhtml04/04032.html
. - A federal ban on two
insecticides
has
resulted
in
a
significant reduction
in
their
impact
on newborns' birth weight
and length,
according
to
a
new
study
funded
by the
National
Institute
of Environmental
Health
Sciences
of
the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Environmental
Protection
Agency, and other private foundations. View
a
press
release
for more information. - On January 22, 2004, Denver unveiled a unique, new art mural that will help protect children from lead poisoning. The mural features photographs of 44 children and serves as a reminder that lead poisoning can harm children. EPA, the Colorado Department of Health and Environment, the City of Denver, and the Northeast Denver Housing Center worked together to make the mural -- a public awareness tool which will reach as many as 500,000 people each day. For more information, please visit http://www.epa.gov/region8.
- Partnership to Reduce Children's Exposure to Emissions from Diesel School Buses
- America's Children and the Environment: Measures of Contaminants, Body Burdens, and Illnesses
Where Children Live, Learn, and Play
- Green Seal, Inc. is in the process of revising GS-37, the Environmental
Standard for Industrial and Institutional Cleaners and seeks public review and
input on the proposed revisions. The revision aims to bring the standard
up-to-date so it more adequately represents current technology available in the
market and ensure that the standard protects vulnerable populations such as
children.
Review the Proposed Revised Standard and background document
. - The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is planning to develop a program called the “Partnerships for Environmental Public Health” (PEPH). The program will support a variety of research, outreach and education activities to prevent, reduce, or eliminate environmental exposures that may lead to adverse health outcomes in communities, with the active engagement of those communities in all stages of the work. To establish a vision for the PEPH Program, the NIEHS is seeking input from the public, environmental health researchers, healthcare professionals, educators, policy makers and others with a vested interest in the effects of environmental exposures on public health through a Request for Information (RFI).
- On January 13, 2006, EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson announced the release of a new tool to help schools identify and prevent health, safety and environmental problems before they arise, building on the agency's voluntary school indoor air quality program. The Healthy School Environments Assessment Tool (HealthySEAT) is a free software tool that school districts can customize to assess potential issues such as mold, asbestos and lead paint, then evaluate and manage information on conditions at each school. Schools can download HealthySEAT at: www.epa.gov/schools.
- New data released October 11, 2005 from a two-year study supported by the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences suggest that a home-based
environmental intervention program is a cost-effective way to improve the
health of inner-city children who have moderate to severe asthma. The program,
which included the use of allergen-impermeable covers on the child's mattress,
box spring and pillows, air purifiers with high efficiency particulate air
(HEPA) filters, vacuum cleaners equipped with HEPA filters, and professional
pest control, successfully decreased allergen levels in the home and reduced
asthma symptoms. View
a National Institutes of Health press release about the study
. - Floodwaters from multiple locations across the New Orleans area were sampled by EPA and analyzed for chemicals and bacteria. These initial results represent the beginning of extensive sampling efforts and do not represent the condition of all flood waters throughout the area. Preliminary information indicates that bacteria counts for E. coli in sampled areas greatly exceed EPA's recommended levels for contact. At these levels, human contact with water should be avoided. View a news release about the floodwater contamination or visit EPA’s Hurricane Katrina response Web page at www.epa.gov/katrina.
- On September 6, 2005, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued
a new report
outlining the dangers of well water in infant nitrate poisoning
. - A
study,
"Acute
Illnesses Associated
With Pesticide
Exposure at
Schools,"
published July 27,
2005 in the Journal of the American
Medical
Association
underscored
the risks
of pesticide
use
in and around
the
nation's
schools. The
study analyzed
2,593 reported
pesticide
poisonings
in
schools
and childcare
centers
from 1998
–
2002 and
reported
several
troubling
findings: incidence rates among children increased significantly from
1998 to
2002;
drifting
pesticides
applied
off
site
were
responsible
for
31%
of reported
poisonings;
and
insecticides and disinfectants were the pesticides
most
frequently at fault.
View a free abstract of the study
. - On June 15, 2005, EPA and several of its partners signed an agreement to reduce lead levels in drinking water in schools and child care facilities. The partners agreed to encourage schools and child care facilities to test drinking water for lead; disseminate results to parents, students, staff, and other interested stakeholders; and take appropriate and necessary actions to correct problems. To learn more, view a press release on the agreement.
- EPA Healthy
School
Environments
Assessment
Tool
Beta
Version
Now
Available
for Testing
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is developing a new, completely voluntary, and fully customizable tool to help school districts conduct self-assessments of their school facilities for potential environmental health and safety hazards. The heart of the tool is a powerful database file that will let school districts customize the tool to manage all aspects of a facility assessment program. The tool comes pre-loaded with a checklist that integrates all of EPA's voluntary and regulatory programs for schools, and is designed so that states and school districts can incorporate their own policies and programs, producing a customized checklist and reference guidebook. To learn more about the draft Healthy School Environments Assessment Tool and download the Beta Version for testing, visit: http://www.epa.gov/schools. EPA is accepting input from organizations and individuals on the draft tool until May 5, 2005. - On November 16, 2004, the Department of Health and Human
Services
entered the
implementation phase of the National Children’s Study, which will
track 100,000
children in 96 locations across the U.S. from birth through age 21.
The study
will follow the children as they grow up, looking at their
genetics,
neighborhoods, schools, and environment to develop important
information that
will safeguard children’s health. To learn more, visit www.nationalchildrensstudy.gov
. - A settlement with Toyota Motor Corporation is providing $20
million to
school districts for filters and ultra-low sulfur fuel for their
school bus
fleets. Districts can get up to $750,000 to retrofit their
school
bus fleets.
School
districts ONLY can
apply. School
districts in
nonattainment
areas for
particulate or ozone will have first priority. For more information,
visit
www.cleanbusesforkids.com
. - The EPA Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, Office of Regulatory Enforcement dedicated the September 2004 issue of "Enforcement Alert" (PDF) to the protection of children from exposure to asbestos at school. To learn more, call the Toxic Substances Control Act Assistance Information Service at (202) 554-1404 or the Asbestos Ombudsman at (800) 368-5888.
- EPA Urges Public to Lock Up Household Products to Protect the Lives of Children in Conjunction with National Poison Prevention Week. [PDF, 3 pp., 162kb]
- During
October,
nurses
can
learn
to create environmentally healthy
homes
and communities
by using the Medscape Web site
.
"Children's Health
and the Environment:
Environmentally
Healthy Homes and Communities" will help nurses identify, prevent
and
manage environmental health risks to children where they live and
play. - On September 29, 2003, EPA unveiled a new Web site, www.epa.gov/highschool/, to help high school students explore and learn about their environment and ways to protect it. The Web site contains information about air and water issues, waste and recycling, conservation, health and safety, ecosystems, and community environmental conditions. It also links interested students to internship and scholarship opportunities, environmental careers, and community involvement projects.
- Partnership to Reduce Children's Exposure to Emissions from Diesel School Buses
Health Topics
- On November 28, 2005, OCHP added new information to its Web site for health care providers. View Children's Environmental Health: Online Resources for Health Care Providers.
- On November 3, 2005, The National Environmental Education & Training
Foundation (NEETF) released Environmental Management of Pediatric Asthma:
Guidelines for Health Care Providers. The guidelines are designed to help
pediatric primary care providers advise families about environmental
interventions to help reduce or eliminate triggers for children diagnosed with
asthma, the nation’s leading pediatric chronic illness. View the complete
guidelines
. - Floodwaters from multiple locations across the New Orleans area were sampled by EPA and analyzed for chemicals and bacteria. These initial results represent the beginning of extensive sampling efforts and do not represent the condition of all flood waters throughout the area. Preliminary information indicates that bacteria counts for E. coli in sampled areas greatly exceed EPA's recommended levels for contact. At these levels, human contact with water should be avoided. View a news release about the floodwater contamination or visit EPA’s Hurricane Katrina response Web page at www.epa.gov/katrina.
- May 2005, Melanoma
and
Skin Cancer Awareness Month

- On March 29, 2005, EPA issued "Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment" and "Supplemental Guidance on Risks from Early-Life Exposure." The documents provide principles and procedures to guide EPA scientists assessing cancer risk from exposures to environmental pollutants. To learn more, view a press release on the documents.
- New results
from a nationwide study
on factors that affect
asthma in
inner-city
children show
that
cockroach
allergen appears to
worsen
asthma
symptoms
more than either
dust mite or pet
allergens.
This research,
funded
by
the National Institute
of Environmental Health
Sciences and the
National
Institute of
Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, is
the first
large-scale study
to
show
marked
geographic differences in allergen
exposure
and
sensitivity
in
inner-city children.
To learn more,
visit
www.niehs.nih.gov/oc/news/cockroach.htm
. - Environment and health agencies in three states were awarded a
total of
$100,000 to conduct pilot projects to address environmental triggers
of
childhood asthma. California will identify model policies and
procedures to
reduce environmental triggers
of asthma, focusing
on where
children
spend
most
of their
time. Wisconsin
will integrate health
and environmental data
related
to childhood asthma into a statewide communication system that will
be made
available to local public health agencies. Wyoming will look at the
relationship between particulate pollution and pediatric asthma, and
will
educate
parents,
school
personnel
and
health
professionals
about
that
relationship
as
it
relates
to
asthma
management.
Learn
more
about
the
"Catching
Your Breath:
Strategies
to Reduce
Environmental
Factors that
Contribute to
Asthma in Children" project
(PDF)
. - On October 2, EPA's SunWise School Program and the Curt and Shonda Schilling Melanoma Foundation of America (SHADE) received the 2003 Excellence in Cancer Awareness award from the Congressional Families Action for Cancer Awareness. The award honored EPA and SHADE Foundation for their partnership to eliminate skin cancer and melanoma. First launched nationally in May 2000, the SunWise School Program tools teach children and their caregivers how to protect themselves from overexposure to the sun's harmful ultraviolet (UV) rays, which can cause serious health effects, including skin cancer. For more information, visit www.epa.gov/sunwise or contact John Millett at (202) 564-7842 or millett.john@epa.gov.
- OCHP has added a fourth paper to its Paper Series on Children's Health and the Environment, titled Asthma-Related Medical Expenditures in the United States: Distributions and Trends.
- EPA has completed draft final Guidelines for Carcinogenic Risk Assessment, which has Supplemental Guidance for Assessing Cancer Susceptibility Resulting from Early-Life Exposure to Carcinogens. The Supplemental Guidance contains an analysis of studies and a possible approach for how quantitative scientific data could inform risk assessments when exposure to carcinogens occurs during childhood is considered. The EPA's Scientific Advisory Board has reviewed the Supplemental Guidance and a draft report of the review is available [PDF 235KB].
- Cancer Guidelines Public Comment Period Open
- America's Children and the Environment: Measures of Contaminants, Body Burdens, and Illnesses
Important Dates
- June 2008:
Home Safety Month

- June 23-27, 2008: National Tribal Conference on Environmental
Management

- June 9-13, 2008: EPICOH-NEUROEH 2008 Conferences:
Multiple Exposures, Multiple Effects

- June 10, 2008: Clinical Directors Network Webinar: Chemical Exposures - Integrating
Environmental and Occupational Health into the Primary Care Setting

- May 2008: Asthma Awareness Month
- April 28, 2008: National Healthy Schools Day
2008

- April 22, 2008: Earth Day
- April 13-19, 2008: National Environmental Education
Week

- April 7-13, 2008: National
Public Health Week

- April 10-11, 2008: WHO
Children's Environmental Health Indicators: Five
Years After the Global Commitment at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development

- April 8, 2008: Environmental Health
Initiative Teleconference on Lead Exposure and
Developmental Disabilities

- April 7, 2008: World
Health Day

- March 24-28, 2008: California Environmental Health Association Annual
Education Symposium: Mission San Diego - Changing the Climate of Environmental
Health

- March 16-22, 2008: National Poison Prevention Week
- March 22, 2008: World Water Day

- March 14, 2008: Making the Connection III: Toxics and
Tomorrow's Children

- February 25-28, 2008: COHAB 2 - Second
International
Conference on Health & Biodiversity

- February 12, 2008: Environmental Health
Initiative Teleconference on Indoor Air Quality and Health
- February 8, 2008: Medical
Approaches in Autism: Clinical Implications of Environmental Toxicology for
Children's Neurodevelopment in Autism

- EPA has designated January as National Radon Action Month to increase awareness about the dangers of inhaling radon gas. The invisible fumes seep into homes through foundation cracks and can reach harmful levels if trapped indoors. Breathing radon causes nearly 100 times more deaths each year than carbon monoxide poisoning and accounts for the second leading source of lung cancer. EPA hopes to save 12,000 lives in the next five years through radon preventative action. Learn more about radon and how you can mitigate its harmful effects.
- November 15, 2007: Webinar - Introducing
HealthySEAT Version 2

- November 13, 2007: American College of Preventive
Medicine free webcast: "Reducing the Risk: Detecting and Preventing Exposure to
Radon and Mold"

- June 10-12, 2007: 4th International
Conference on Children’s Health and the Environment

- May 31 - June 1, 2007: Communities in
Action for Asthma-Friendly Environments National Asthma Forum

- May 2007: Asthma Awareness Month
- May 20-24, 2007: International Conference on
Developmental Toxicity and Fetal Programming

- May 10-11, 2007: Priming for Prevention: An
Ecological Approach to Research, Education and Policy

- May 1-2, 2007: Voluntary
Children's Chemical Evaluation Program (VCCEP) Peer Consultation Meeting on
p-Dioxane

- April 30, 2007: National Healthy Schools
Day

- April 24-27, 2007: 2007 National Lead Mold
Conference

- April 15-22, 2007: National Environmental Education Week

- April 18-19, 2007: Institute of Medicine's
Forum on Neuroscience and Nervous System Disorders Workshop: "Autism and the
Environment: Challenges and Opportunities for Research"

- April 22, 2007: Earth Day
- March 29-31, 2007: The State of Environmental Justice in
America 2007 Conference

- March 18-24, 2007: National Poison Prevention Week
- March 16, 2007: Environmental Health Is a
VERB! Building Healthy Children Symposium

- March 3-7, 2007: 2007
Association of Maternal and Child Health Programs (AMCHP) Conference

- March 5-7, 2007: Western Regional Conference
on Eliminating Childhood Lead Poisoning, Implementing Healthy Homes Programs,
and Combating Indoor Environmental Hazards

- February 1-2, 2007: The
National Council for Science and the Environment’s 7th National Conference on
Science, Policy, and the Environment: Integrating Environment and Human
Health

- January 28-30, 2007: 2007 UCSF-CHE Summit on
Environmental Challenges to Reproductive Health and Fertility

- November 15 – 16, 2006: Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Workshop and Plenary [Word, 99 KB]
- November 15-17, 2006: Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act Scientific Advisory Panel
- October 12, 2006: Workshop -
Protecting Maine's Children from Environmental Risks: Problems & Solutions

- October 12, 2006: New York Children's Environmental Health Leadership Symposium. For information, email Stephen J. Boese at sboese@healthyschools.org
- October 2, 2006: Child Health Day (Presidential Proclamation)
- September 24-29, 2006: National
Forum on Tribal
Environmental Science

- September 19-21, 2006: 2006 Region 8 Children's Environmental Health Summit
- September 14-15, 2006:
National Academy of Sciences
Workshop - Exposure to Human Disease: Research Strategies to Address
Current
Challenges

- September 16, 2006: Fourth Biennial Scientific Symposium on Children's
Health as Impacted by Environmental Contaminants

- August 21-25, 2006:
DIOXIN2006 - 26th International Symposium on Halogenated Persistent Organic
Pollutants

- August 6-11, 2006: International
Conference on Mercury as a Global Pollutant

- July
17-19, 2006: Indoor
Environmental Quality: Problems, Research and Solutions

- July 19-21, 2006: Alabama
Environmental Health
Association's Annual Education Conference

- May 2006: Asthma Awareness Month
- May 22-29, 2006: Recreational Water Illness Prevention Week
- May 24, 2006: Workshop for nurses and other health professionals serving
children, "
Protecting Connecticut's Children from
Environmental
Risks: Problems
and Solutions
" - May 22-23, 2006: National Asthma Forum

- May 16-18, 2006: Fifth annual EPA Science Forum, "Your Health, Your Environment, Your Future"
- May 3, 2006: Asthma Awareness
Day Capitol Hill

- May 2, 2006: World Asthma Day
- April 22, 2006: Earth Day
- April 3-8, 2006: National Public Health Week
- Various Dates 2006: Half-day public meetings, "Lead Renovation, Repair and Painting Program"
- April 4-6, 2006: First public meeting of the Human Studies Review Board (HSRB)
- March 19-25, 2006: National Poison Prevention Week
- March 13-15, 2006: TestSmart DNT (Developmental
Neurotoxicity) Open Registration Meeting

- January 2006: National Radon Action Month
- January 26-27, 2006: 6th National
Conference on Science, Policy, and the
Environment: Energy for a Sustainable and Secure Future

- January 9-11, 2006: National
Leadership Summit on
Eliminating
Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health

- Due to the holidays and
overwhelming
requests to extend the
deadline to apply for the 2006 Children’s Environmental Health Excellence
Awards,
EPA extended the deadline until January 2, 2006.
The awards are designed to recognize ongoing and sustainable dedication to, and notable leadership in, protecting children from environmental health risks at the local, regional, national, and international level. To learn more about the application process, view the awards' application instructions (PDF/1,020K).
- December 9, 2005: Mid-America
Pediatric Environmental Hazards Conference

- December 7-8, 2005:
Midwest
Regional
Lead and Mold Conference

- November 29-30, 2005: National Children’s Study Assembly Meeting
- November 17-18, 2005: Western
Regional Lead and
Mold
Conference

- October 23-29, 2005, National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week
- October 2005, Children’s Health Month
- National Pollution Prevention Week was September 19-25, 2005. This year’s theme at EPA was "Environmental Stewardship Begins at Home."
- September 18-21, 2005, Fish Forum sponsored by EPA and the Maryland Department of Environment
- July 26-29, 2005, Children's World
Summit
for the
Environment

- April
27-28, 2005,
National
Children's
Study Federal
Advisory Committee Meeting

- Learn how you can protect the environment on Earth Day and year-round and see what EPA is doing to ensure a healthier environment by visiting EPA's Earth Day Web page at http://epa.gov/earthday/.
- April 22, 2005, Earth Day
- April 21, 2005, Children's Environmental Health Awards Ceremony in Washington, D.C.
- April
17-19, 2005, Health
Effects
Institute Annual Conference

- February
19-23, 2005: 2005 Association of Maternal and Child Health Programs
Annual
Conference
(AMCHP)

- January
12-13, 2005: Surgeon General’s Workshop on Healthy
Indoor
Environment

- December
2-4, 2004:
EPA’s 5th
Annual
Indoor
Air
Quality Tools for
Schools National
Symposium

- November
9-10, 2004: 2004
Indiana
Lead-Safe & Healthy Homes Conference

- November 6-10, 2004:American Public Health Association Annual Meeting
- October
18-19, 2004: EPA
and
NIEHS
Joint
Research Workshop on Asthma Induction
- October
9-13,
2004:
American Academy of
Pediatrics (AAP) National Conference &
Exhibition

- September
24-25, 2004: Biennial
Scientific
Symposium on
Children's Health as Impacted
by Environmental
Contaminants

- September 13, 2004: Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies, Healthy Environments – A Nurse’s Role in Assessing and Addressing the Health Risks to Mothers and Babies from Environmental Exposures
- September
11, 2004: Conference on
Children's
Health and
the
Environment

- Photo, Essay,
and Poetry Contests Announced June 14, 2004
Two photography and writing contests highlighting older Americans will take place this summer. The Environmental Protection Agency's Aging Initiative has announced a Photo, Essay, and Poetry Contest entitled "What I did to improve the environment and protect health this summer." Selected submissions will be highlighted on the EPA Aging Initiative Web site in the fall. Each submission must show older adults working to improve health through the environment. The deadline is Aug. 27. - Generations United, with support from MetLife Foundation's Healthy Aging Initiative, is holding a 2004 Intergenerational Photography Contest. The contest is for the best intergenerational photo taken by a younger or older person, of younger and older people together. Entries must be postmarked by July 31.
- The Mercury Medical and Public Health Issues Symposium will be held from April 28-30.
- On April 21-23, 2004, the Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units (PEHSU) will hold their annual meeting at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, DC. The meeting will include sessions on exploring new ideas/strategies for enhancing the promotion and outreach activities of the PEHSU program and exploring the latest information on best practices, research, and emerging science in pediatric environmental health. For more information, contact Paula M. Davis, PEHSU Program Coordinator, at 1-888-347-AOEC.
- February 22-25, 2004, Baltimore Marriott Inner Harbor Hotel. EPA's National Air Quality Conference provides a unique opportunity to learn the latest information on fine particle and ozone mapping, air quality forecasting, the Air Quality Index (AQI) and your health, and innovative outreach programs. This year's conference will have a special emphasis on year-round forecasting, mapping, and outreach activities. Come share your experiences and learn about more effective ways to provide the information needed by the public to make healthy choices, every day of the year.
- October is Children's Health Month! Visit the Children's Health Month Web site to discover the rewards of healthy children and take advantage of a special October calendar that includes an action step for each day of the month - topics ranging from nutrition and school health, to environmental safety, to injury and disease prevention.
- On October 26-28, 2003, EPA will host its 4th Annual Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools National Symposium at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Washington, DC.
- On October
20-21, 2003, EPA
will host its second "Workshop
on Valuing
Environmental Health
Risk Reductions to Children" at the
Washington Plaza
Hotel in Washington,
D.C.
For the
workshop's agenda, registration
information,
and logistics, visit
the
workshop's
Web site.

- October 19-25, 2003 is the fifth annual Lead Poisoning Prevention Week. This year's theme is "Partnering for Prevention," emphasizing the large number of lead poisoning prevention resources available. Events being held across the country include free blood-lead tests for children, opportunities for education and outreach to families, and workshops on lead education and safety. Low-level lead poisoning, due to the existence of lead paint in older homes, continues to be a concern for as many as three million American children under the age of six and can trigger learning disabilities, decreased growth, hyperactivity, impaired hearing and even brain damage. For more information, contact your local health department, call 1-800-424-LEAD or visit EPA's Web site at www.epa.gov/lead/.
- Earth Day 2003 Helps Protect Children and the Aging
- April 7 is World Health Day: Shape the Future of Life - Healthy Environments for Children
Agency News
- April 22-24, 2008: Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Meeting - Draft Agenda (Word) (5 pp, 101K)
- November 27-29, 2007: Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Meeting - Revised Draft Agenda (Word) (4 pp, 105K)
- March 13-15, 2007: Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Workshop and Plenary [Word, 125 KB]
- April 20, 2006: 2006 Children's Environmental Health Awards Ceremony
- February 28-March 2, 2006, Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Meeting View the draft agenda in Word format [105 KB]
- On January 24, 2006, EPA Regions 9 and 10 announced the availability of $3 million in grant monies for projects aimed at reducing diesel emissions on the West Coast. EPA is seeking grant proposals for projects that demonstrate new, innovative or experimental approaches to reducing diesel emissions. Past grant projects included electrifying truck stops and cruise ship terminals, converting restaurant waste oil to biodiesel fuel and a establishing a revolving loan fund to reduce locomotive emissions. To learn more, visit http://yosemite.ep a.gov/R10/airpage.nsf/grants/wcc+rfp.
- In November 2005, OCHP developed fact sheets in English and Spanish about the North American network of Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units (PEHSU’s). The fact sheets provide background on the critical role of the environment in child development, describe the function of PEHSU’s, and provide useful Web site addresses. Download Children's Environmental Health and the North American Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units (PDF/71K) or La Salud Ambiental De Los Niños Y Las Unidades Norteamericanas Especializadas De Salud Medioambiental Pediátrica (PDF/88K).
- Announced November 3, 2005, EPA’s Office of Policy Economics and Innovation is seeking applications from communities that want assistance with implementing Smart Growth through policy analysis or public participatory processes. Assistance will be provided through an agency contract vehicle, not a grant. Learn more about this opportunity or related grant opportunities on our Grants Management page.
- On November 1, 2005, EPA awarded seven grants to build health professional capacity to address children's environmental health. The grants will help increase the number of physicians, nurses, and public health workers who are able to address the broad spectrum of children's environmental health issues in their practices, in the institutions in which they work, in their communities, and in academic settings. View a summary of the awards or the EPA press release announcing the awards.
- October 24-26, 2005, Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Meeting at Hotel Washington in Washington, D.C. View the draft agenda in PDF format [28 KB]
- Congratulations to the DC Safe Kids Coalition, the 2005 recipient of the Safe Kids Worldwide Coalition of the Year Award, which uses EPA's Live, Learn and Play: Tune Into Your Health and Environment to educate its constituents about environmental health.
- On September 29, 2005,
the National Children's Study awarded
contracts to
six Vanguard Centers to pilot and complete the first phases
of the Study. The
planned Study is the largest long-term study of human health and development
ever conducted in the United States. By following the development of 100,000
children from before birth to age 21, Study researchers hope to better
understand how children’s genes and
environments
interact to affect their
health.
The Study is led by a consortium of federal agency partners: the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services (including the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences at NIH, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. To learn more, visit the National Children’s Study Web site
. - On
September 7, 2005, EPA
announced a
new proposed rule in
the
Federal
Register regarding
Protections
for
Subjects in Human Research. This
new rule
contains some of the
strongest protections for
human subjects ever
proposed by
the federal
government,
including a ban on any testing of pesticides
that
involves intentional dosing of pregnant women or children. The
proposed rule
was
published in the Federal Register on September 12,
2005. View the
Federal Register
notice
. - July 12-14, 2005, Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Meeting at Hotel Washington in Washington, D.C. View the draft agenda in PDF format [27 KB] or Word format [60 KB]
- Children’s Environmental Health Award
Winners
Announced!
Fifteen Excellence Awards were presented to groups or individuals that exemplify invaluable leadership in the protection of children from environmental health risks at an awards ceremony on April 21, 2005. Recognition Awards were presented to groups or individuals who demonstrated commitment to protecting children from environmental health risks.
- February 22-24, 2005: Children’s Health Protection Advisory Committee Meeting at Hotel Washington in Washington, D.C. View the agenda. [PDF, 26 KB]
- EPA
supported the WHO effort to
create "Inheriting the
World: the Atlas of
Children's Health
and Environment
" launched at
the
Fourth Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health in
Budapest. - EPA
Launches First
Annual Children's
Environmental
Health Awards
To raise awareness and highlight the importance of protecting children from environmental risks, EPA is pleased to announce the launch of its first annual children's environmental health awards. These awards are designed to recognize and highlight the exemplary achievements of organizations or individuals who have demonstrated a level of commitment and leadership in protecting children from environmental risks.
We encourage you to apply for these awards to earn your organization recognition for their commitment to protecting children from environmental hazards and for setting a good example for others to follow.
Download the awards description and application (PDF/769K)!
Press Release - In January 2005, EPA launched a new Spanish Web site as part of its ongoing effort to provide environmental information both in Spanish and English. The site compiles EPA's Spanish language materials on a wide variety of areas from lead poisoning prevention to controlling asthma triggers, recycling to proper management of pesticides. The site also offers educational resources for students and teachers, information about EPA grants, small business opportunities, and environmental jobs at EPA. To view EPA's Spanish site, visit www.epa.gov/espanol.
- On November 30, 2004, EPA released a Notice of Data Availability (NODA) for its proposed Clean Air Mercury Rule. The NODA summarizes the more than 680,000 public comments received during the comment period and solicits further comment on new data and information to help EPA evaluate which regulatory approach will best reduce mercury emissions from power plants. The NODA is part of the EPA process toward delivering a final mercury rule by March 15, 2005. Initially proposed on Jan. 30, 2004, the Clean Air Mercury Rule would reduce mercury emissions from power plants for the first time ever. For more information, view an EPA press release on the NODA.
- A Children's Health Protection Advisory Committee meeting was held on October 27-28, 2004 at Hotel Washington in Washington, D.C. View the agenda for the meeting. (PDF/64K)
- A Children's Health Protection Advisory Committee meeting will be held May 25-27, 2004 at Hotel Washington in Washington, D.C. View the agenda for the meeting.
- The January 2004 issue of "Kid Flash" is available on the Office of Children's Health Protection Web site. Kid Flash provides an update of EPA activities to protect children from environmental health hazards.
- The Office of Children's Health Protection, in coordination with other EPA program offices, has developed a new children's environmental health brochure titled, "Protect Children, Protect Our Future."
- The Children's Health Valuation Handbook is a reference tool for people conducting economic analysis of EPA policies that affect children's health. The handbook is a companion document to "EPA's Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analysis" (2000) and provides information on ways to incorporate the unique environmental risks to youth. It also describes EPA's criteria for valuing children's health effects and will encourage research among economists and other experts.
- February 22-25, 2004, Baltimore Marriott Inner Harbor Hotel. EPA's National Air Quality Conference provides a unique opportunity to learn the latest information on fine particle and ozone mapping, air quality forecasting, the Air Quality Index (AQI) and your health, and innovative outreach programs. This year's conference will have a special emphasis on year-round forecasting, mapping, and outreach activities. Come share your experiences and learn about more effective ways to provide the information needed by the public to make healthy choices, every day of the year. Please see the link below for details: https://www.ergweb.com/projects/airquality/2004/register.htm
- A Children's Health Protection Advisory Committee meeting will be held January 14-15, 2004 at Hotel Washington in Washington, D.C. View the the agenda [PDF 48KB] for the meeting.
- The new "America's Children and the Environment" Web site is a resource for researchers, policymakers and concerned citizens on children's environmental health. The site presents: trends for levels of environmental contaminants in air, water, food and soil; concentrations of contaminants measured in the bodies of women and children; and childhood illnesses that may be influenced by environmental contaminants.
- The Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP), a group of independent scientists that advises EPA on critical science issues, will evaluate and provide comments to further refine EPA's draft risk assessment on pressure-treated wood on Dec. 3-5. The draft assessment evaluates the potential risks to children who play on playsets and decks made with wood pressure-treated with chromated copper arsenate (CCA). EPA is also conducting a study on whether sealants can reduce or eliminate exposure to arsenic in CCA-treated wood as a way to help consumers make informed choices around their home. Results from this study are expected in 2004. View the draft risk assessment.
- EPA's Office of Solid Waste announces an art contest for students. By entering, students can help EPA save natural resources and protect our environment by promoting waste prevention. Students from kindergarten - 6th grade are invited to enter an Earth Day 2004 Poster Contest and students from 7th - 12th grade are invited to enter a CD Cover Contest. For details, rules, and prize information visit www.epa.gov /epaoswer/osw/specials/artcontest/index.htm.
- On October 26-28, 2003, EPA will host its 4th Annual Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools National Symposium at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Washington, DC.
- On
October
20-21, 2003,
EPA will host
its
second "Workshop
on Valuing
Environmental
Health Risk
Reductions
to Children" at the
Washington Plaza
Hotel
in Washington,
D.C. For the workshop's agenda, registration
information,
and logistics,
visit the
workshop's
Web site.

- OCHP has added a fourth paper to its Paper Series on Children's Health and the Environment, titled Asthma-Related Medical Expenditures in the United States: Distributions and Trends.
- EPA has completed draft final Guidelines for Carcinogenic Risk Assessment, which has Supplemental Guidance for Assessing Cancer Susceptibility Resulting from Early-Life Exposure to Carcinogens. The Supplemental Guidance contains an analysis of studies and a possible approach for how quantitative scientific data could inform risk assessments when exposure to carcinogens occurs during childhood is considered. The EPA's Scientific Advisory Board has reviewed the Supplemental Guidance and a draft report of the review is available [PDF 235KB].
- EPA Administrator Christie Whitman announces the availability of a $5 million grant program to make school buses cleaner for the 24 million children who travel on a bus to and from school every day. The grants are under EPA's Clean School Bus USA initiative, which is designed to limit children's exposure to the harmful effects of diesel exhaust from school buses.
- A
Children's
Health Protection Advisory
Committee meeting
will be held July 15-17, 2003
at
Hotel
Washington in
Washington, D.C. View the agenda
for
the meeting
[PDF
139KB]. To
view documents in PDF format,
the free
Acrobat
Reader
is required. - Upcoming teleconference meeting (June 20, 2003) to discuss the draft report of the Supplemental Guidance for Assessing Cancer Susceptibility from Early-life Exposure to Carcinogens (SGACS) review panel.
- Cancer Guidelines Public Comment Period Open
- President Extends Executive Order for Task Force on Environmental Risks to Children
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