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Making Older Homes a Safer Haven for Young Families

Making Older Homes a Safer Haven for Young Families

When Karah Witmer and her husband purchased their home as a safe place to raise their growing family, they envisioned all the usual milestones and markers of a happy childhood—not health hazards. They thought it was merely a safe precaution when, while Karah was in the hospital after her baby’s birth, a member of her care team at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health offered to have their home tested for lead hazards through a program called Lead-Free Families (LFF). 

Program Lead-Free Families
Location Lancaster
Health Need Social Determinants & More

It is estimated that some 91,000 homes in Lancaster County have lead hazards, often from lead-based paint. Lead poisoning does not always have obvious symptoms and has no cure, which means that preventing young children’s exposure is crucial. The health risks of lead include damage to the brain including lifelong learning disabilities and behavioral problems.  

When the Witmers’ home actually did test positive for lead, in the spring of 2024 they became one of the latest families to benefit from the initiative’s investment toward eliminating childhood lead poisoning in Lancaster County, Pa. Funded by $50 million from Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health and run in partnership with the Green & Healthy Homes Initiative, Lead-Free Families is the first such program in the United States to be 100-percent funded and led by a health system. 

Since the program’s launch in 2021, Lead-Free Families set a goal of identifying and remediating lead hazards in at least 2,800 Lancaster County homes over 10 years, while also providing community education and support services for families.  

In addition to in-home lead testing and removal, Lead-Free Families focuses on improved screening for children and pregnant women, community education, and public policy advocacy. The LFF team also manages the Healthy Homes Program, a federally funded initiative that addresses many environment-related childhood diseases and injuries in a coordinated way. The program focuses on concerns including mold, lead, allergens, asthma, carbon monoxide, home safety, pesticides, and radon.