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Health and Fitness

Could Your Classroom Make You Sick?
What students need to know about school sanitation.
By Claire L. Barnett

TWEENS & TEENS News September 2006

More children than ever suffer from asthma, and asthma is the nation’s leading cause of school absenteeism due to chronic illness.

While everyone today seems to know at least one student with asthma, what most students do not know is that asthma is also a leading occupational disease among teachers and custodians. What are they breathing that leads to asthma on the job? Is this affecting students, too?

School personnel are breathing indoor air pollution. And, yes, the pollution affects students. And, no, no one should be required to breathe polluted air indoors.

Each day over 53 million schoolchildren and six million adults, 20 percent of the entire U.S. population, enter our nation’s 120,000 school buildings to teach and learn. Unfortunately, in too many cases, they enter “unclean school buildings” that undermine education, health and attendance. The current estimate is that while all 53 million people are at risk, some 32 million children are at highest risk due to poor conditions in schools and/or lack of public health protections.

Here’s why. First, adults may have some form of occupational health protection on the job, such as a right to know about job hazards and personal protective gear. When teens take summer or afterschool jobs on school grounds, they also have those rights. However, students actually have no right to a healthy school nor the knowledge about hazards that may be affecting their health or learning. Yet, children in their developing years (birth-age 18) are more vulnerable to environmental hazards than adults.

Second, many school facilities have been poorly maintained and thousands of our nation’s schools remain severely overcrowded. In addition, schools are often on cheap land, sited next to industrial plants, on abandoned landfills or in wetlands. In a recent five-state survey, more than 1,100 public schools were built within a half-mile of a toxic waste site. Toxic chemical and pesticide use, polluted indoor air, growing molds, lead in paint and drinking water, asbestos, PCBs in caulking, and decaying PVC tile floors or fiber glass ceiling tiles with loose particles are all factors that impact the health of our nation’s students and school staff. These problems contribute to absenteeism, student medication use, learning difficulties, sick building syndrome, staff turnover and greater liability for school districts.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Studies show, one-half of our nation’s 120,000 schools have problems linked to indoor air quality. Students, teachers and staff are at greater risk because of the hours spent in school facilities and because children are especially susceptible to pollutants.” Schools are also more densely occupied and more intensively used than commercial offices for adults, another contributor to the overall problem.

This comes at a time when six million school-age children are afflicted with asthma. According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 14 million school days are lost annually as a result of asthma. The increase in asthma is particularly acute in urban areas with large numbers of African-American, Hispanic American and other minority students.

Clear and convincing research shows that improving school indoor environmental quality, siting and design; using non-toxic products for cleaning, maintenance and instruction; providing more natural daylight; and creating energy-efficient neighborhood schools with adequate, safe space for outdoor activities all help protect the health of school kids. In turn, these changes help improve public education and create healthier communities.

Fortunately, there is a powerful, growing constituency for protecting the health and learning of our nation’s schoolchildren. Millions of parents, along with thousands of organizations, community groups, public health and professional organizations, school employees, labor unions and environmental groups support environmentally safe and healthy schools, including the parents and teachers of the seven million children in special education programs.

Students can take action as well. Student councils, student newspapers and environmental clubs represent good groups to organize special projects to maintain a healthier school. Here’s how: Form a “Green Squad” or team to assess the gym, cafeteria, buses, playgrounds and classrooms for areas to make sanitation and health improvements. To access more details about forming such a group, log on to www.nrdc.org/greensquad/. If you’re curious about the science of school environments, ask your school nurse or your local library for a copy of Science-based Recommendations to Prevent or Reduce Potential Exposure to Biological, Chemical, and Physical Agents in Schools (Shendell, et al, Journal of School Health, December 2004, vol 74, no 10, pp 390-396).

Schools get dirty every day— from all the in and out traffic, food spills, fingerprints, scuff marks and other common occurrences in public places. To clean the building, your custodians may have been told to use very strong cleaning chemicals. Strong cleaning chemicals can affect people’s health in many ways, including adding to indoor air pollution.

There are three specific things you as students can do (for more technical guidance, see the free, eight-page online Guide to Healthier Cleaning and Maintenance Practices and Products at www.healthyschools.org):

1. Find new ways to help keep your school cleaner day to day which will help reduce the need for cleaning. For example, do the doorways have walk-off mats? Are the sidewalks clean? Are there trash containers near the doors so that students can drop litter there and not in the halls? Is food storage and eating confined to the cafeteria?

2. Find out what cleaning products are being used and if they are hazardous. Ask to see the product labels and/or the Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS), both of which indicate human health hazards. If the products contain serious hazards ents, find out what less toxic alternatives are available in the marketplace to replace what is currently being used.

3. Present your research to the facility director and to the principal, and ask them to switch to less toxic products. Then help school administrators keep the school cleaner each day by adopting your recommendations for mats, trash receptacles, and food storage and consumption areas.

When your school has successfully switched to greener, healthier cleaning products, ask the school board to adopt a Policy Resolution on Environmental Purchasing.
Remember: Thank your school administrators for helping to make your school a healthier place for all students and staff!

Claire L. Barnett is the founding executive of the organization that advocates for healthier and cleaner schools for all children. Healthy Schools Network’s Clearinghouse of guides and reports provide user-friendly tips for how to find and fix environmental health hazards at school and in daycare settings. In addition, GREEN SQUAD, an environmental education program targeting middle schoolers (online, in English and Spanish) was jointly created with the Natural Resources Defense Council to help students take steps to improve their own school environment.




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