Galke Warren, Clark Scott, McLaine Pat, Bornschein Robert, Wilson Jonathan, Succop Paul, Roda Sandy, Breysse Jill, Jacobs David, Grote Joann, Menrath William, Dixon Sherry, Chen Mei, Buncher Ralph
National Center for Healthy Housing, Research and Evaluation, 10227 Wincopin Circle, Suite 100, Columbia, MD 21044, USA.
Environ Res. 2005 Jul;98(3):315-28. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2004.12.011.
The US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) undertook an evaluation of its Lead Hazard Control Grant Program between 1994 and 1999. The Evaluation is the largest study ever done on the effectiveness of lead hazard controls implemented in residential dwellings. The Evaluation had several major objectives: determining the effectiveness of various lead hazard controls in reducing residential dust lead levels and children's blood lead levels, establishing the costs of doing lead hazard control work and factors that influence those costs, determining the rate of clearance testing failures and their causes, and identifying possible negative effects of lead hazard control work on children's blood lead levels. This paper reports the overall research design and data collection methods of the Evaluation. The large number of dwelling units enrolled in the Evaluation was possible only by the innovative partnership among HUD, the Evaluators, and the grantees. HUD and the Evaluators relied on the grantees for essentially all of the data collection. The 14 participating HUD Lead Hazard Control Grantees were responsible for implementing the lead hazard control programs in their communities and collecting the study data. This paper describes the methods for recruiting and enrolling dwellings and families, collecting environmental and housing data, interviewing participating families, and collecting data on lead hazard control work performed and its costs. The paper also describes the basic quality control and quality assurance procedures used. The principal outcome measures were lead in dust collected using wipes from floors, window sills, and window troughs and lead in blood collected from children who were 6 years old or younger at enrollment. Data collection was conducted before intervention, immediately postintervention, and 6 and 12 months postintervention. For a subset of dwellings undergoing an extended follow-up data were also collected at 24 and 36 months postintervention. This paper provides the context for subsequent reports that will describe such findings as the influence of lead hazard control work on serial dust lead levels, the influence of lead hazard control work on serial blood lead levels in children, the nature and costs of the lead hazard control work done at the dwellings, and the experience of the grantees in meeting clearance testing requirements.
美国住房和城市发展部(HUD)在1994年至1999年期间对其铅危害控制拨款计划进行了评估。该评估是有史以来对住宅中实施的铅危害控制效果进行的规模最大的研究。该评估有几个主要目标:确定各种铅危害控制措施在降低住宅灰尘铅含量和儿童血铅水平方面的有效性,确定进行铅危害控制工作的成本以及影响这些成本的因素,确定清除测试失败率及其原因,以及确定铅危害控制工作对儿童血铅水平可能产生的负面影响。本文报告了该评估的总体研究设计和数据收集方法。只有通过HUD、评估人员和受赠方之间的创新合作关系,才有可能让大量住宅单元参与到评估中来。HUD和评估人员基本上依靠受赠方来进行所有数据收集工作。14个参与的HUD铅危害控制受赠方负责在其社区实施铅危害控制计划并收集研究数据。本文描述了招募和纳入住宅及家庭、收集环境和住房数据、采访参与家庭以及收集所开展的铅危害控制工作及其成本数据的方法。本文还描述了所采用的基本质量控制和质量保证程序。主要的结果指标是使用擦拭布从地板、窗台和窗槽收集的灰尘中的铅以及在登记时6岁及以下儿童采集的血液中的铅。数据收集在干预前、干预后立即、干预后6个月和12个月进行。对于一部分接受延长随访的住宅,在干预后24个月和36个月也收集了数据。本文为后续报告提供了背景,后续报告将描述诸如铅危害控制工作对连续灰尘铅含量的影响、铅危害控制工作对儿童连续血铅水平的影响、住宅中所开展的铅危害控制工作的性质和成本,以及受赠方在满足清除测试要求方面的经验等研究结果。