U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 7
11201 Renner Blvd.,
Lenexa, KS 66219
Iowa, Kansas,
Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal Nations
St. Louis County, Mo., Health Department
Receives $30,000 EPA Grant for Community-Based Asthma Care in Normandy School
District
Contact Information:
David Bryan, 913-551-7433, bryan.david@epa.gov
Environmental
News
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
(Lenexa, Kan., Oct.
11, 2011) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has announced that the St.
Louis County Health Department will receive $30,000 for community-based asthma
care for the Normandy School District. The funding is part of a combined $1.2
million in funding to 32 state and local governments, tribes, and non-profit
organizations for indoor air quality projects across the nation.
According to school
district nurses, approximately 880 of 4,500 students in the district are known
to have asthma. The health department will raise awareness of asthma and its
triggers among school district staff including school nurses. The department
will also provide education materials to caregivers and persons with asthma on
the management of indoor asthma triggers. The project includes in-home
assessments and classroom training for healthcare professionals on indoor asthma
trigger management.
“EPA is proud to be
working with our awardees across the nation to improve the air we breathe at
school, work and home,” said Gina McCarthy, assistant administrator for EPA’s
Office of Air and Radiation. “American communities face serious health and
environmental challenges from air pollution. This effort gives us an opportunity
to improve indoor air quality by increasing awareness of environmental health
risks.”
Indoor air
pollutants in homes, buildings, and schools can negatively impact the health of
occupants. Some pollutants cause health problems such as sore eyes, burning in
the nose and throat, headaches or fatigue. Others can cause worsen allergies,
respiratory illnesses (such as asthma) or even cancer (from radon
gas).
The projects will
help improve indoor air quality and reduce the associated health risks
by:
-
Increasing effective indoor air quality practices through community-level education and outreach
-
Promoting positive indoor air quality management practices in schools by working with school districts and teachers
-
Increasing the number of homes tested for radon, homes built with radon-resistant features, and existing homes mitigated for radon
-
Creating awareness to reduce asthma triggers in the home and encourage the use of asthma management plans through community-based asthma programs
EPA emphasized
selecting projects that assist low income and minority families that are
disproportionately impacted by poor indoor air quality.
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