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Urban Service Talks is a student centered, student run podcast series developed and produced by Urban Health/AHEC Scholars, and is sponsored by CT AHEC. Urban Service Talks explores issues and answers questions important to today's and tomorrow's healthcare workforce. The focus of the podcast includes key pillars of the Urban Service Track/AHEC Scholars program: interprofessional education and team-based care, addressing social determinants of health, and care for the underserved, while featuring the voices of students from a variety of healthcare profession training programs at UCONN and Quinnipiac University. The topics for the podcasts are varied and feature students, professionals, and community members. The target audience includes health professions trainees, health and public health professionals, as well as pre-health professions students. To listen to the podcast, access Urban Service Talks through your preferred media account. Stay connected with Urban Service Talks through Twitter @TalksService and Instagram @urbanservicetalks. We welcome listener feedback about topics, presenters and most importantly, the dialogue and energy of our podcast series. Please contact us at ust.pod@gmail.com.
Episodes

Monday Jun 24, 2024
26. Pediatric Lead Levels
Monday Jun 24, 2024
Monday Jun 24, 2024
Protecting children from exposure to lead is a public health priority. There is no safe blood lead level for children. In this episode, Abhishek Gupta, a UConn medical student, interviews Dr. Jennifer Haile, a pediatrician and Medical Director of the Connecticut Children’s Regional Lead Treatment Program, to learn why lead exposure is so dangerous for children and what healthcare providers and caregivers must do to address the problem. In 2023, Connecticut passed a law addressing lead poisoning that included the 2021 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendation to lower the actionable blood lead level of 5 micrograms per deciliter (µg/dL) to 3.5 µg/dL. Dr. Haile has faculty appointments at both the UConn School of Medicine and Connecticut Children’s Pediatric Residency Program.
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