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Parents: Check Toys for Lead

You’ve heard lots of reports about lead paint causing recalls of children’s toys. While federal officials and health experts work to fix the problem, what can you do to keep your kids safe?

First, you can check you child's toys against those listed as being recalled due to lead issues. You can find the list—back to 1973—at the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)  website. You can even sign up for email updates.

If you have toys that have been recalled, don’t throw them out. Take them back to the store where they came from. In some cases, you can get a refund even without a receipt. Check the recall “remedy,” as it’s known, on the CPSC website.

Watch for secondhand toys

Recalled toys seldom make it back  to the stores. They surface at yard sales or secondhand stores. Some are even reclaimed from the trash after well-meaning parents throw them out.

This issue is important for parents and children because lead paint has been found in a wide range of toys. Cheap metal charms and jewelry are especially important items to avoid.

Ingesting lead can harm kids’ development, and any amount of lead in a child's body is bad. If you find your child playing with a toy that has flaking paint, take the toy away and ask your doctor about testing your child for lead. 

Sadly, kids are exposed to lead in many ways, including lead paint in their homes and lead in the soil that surrounds their home.   

Please consult your doctor with any questions or concerns you may have regarding this condition. 

Tracking toy recalls

Publication Source: Binns, Helen, M.D., M.P.H., director, Lead Evaluation Clinic, Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago; chair, AAP Committee on Environmental Health; professor of pediatrics, Northwestern University. Interview.
Publication Source: Chusid, Sarah, program director, Kids In Danger, Chicago. Interview.
Publication Source: Starting Out Healthy/Summer 2008
Author: Bramnick, Jeffrey
Online Source: Recall Digest, Kids In Dangerhttp://kidsindanger.org/publications/fact_flyer/Recall_Digest_0907.pdf
Online Source: Yard Sale Safety Tips, Kids In Dangerhttp://kidsindanger.org/publications/fact_flyer/Yard%20Sale%20Flyer%20Final.pdf
Online Source: Toy Safety Resources, American Academy of Pediatricshttp://www.aap.org/new/toyrecall.htm
Online Source: FAQs regarding recent Consumer Product Safety Commission recalls of children’s toys due to excessive levels of lead, AAP, 2007http://www.aap.org/new/toyrecall-FAQ-2007.pdf
Online Source: American Academy of Pediatrics http://www.aap.org/new/toysafety-part1.pdf
Online Source: CDChttp://www.cdc.gov/nceh/lead/tips/toys.htm
Online Source: Toy Hazard Recalls, Consumer Product Safety Commissionhttp://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/category/toy.html
Online Source: Consumer Product Safety Commissionhttp://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prerel.html
Online Source: Toy Safety Shopping Tips, Consumer Product Safety Commissionhttp://www.cpsc.gov/CPSCPUB/PUBS/GRAND/TOY/toysafe.html
Online Editor: Geller, Arlene
Online Medical Reviewer: Fraser, Marianne, MSN, RN
Online Medical Reviewer: Marcellin, Lindsey, MD
Date Last Reviewed: 8/7/2011
Date Last Modified: 8/15/2011
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