Kent State Geography Professor Andrew Curtis and his doctoral student Laura Schuch, in the College of Arts and Sciences, have developed mapping approaches that can help predict neighborhood lead exposure in children, which continues to be a health concern in older neighborhoods including several in Akron.
to read more in the Akron Beacon Journal.
For two years, Curtis’s Geographic Information System (GIS) Health and Hazards Lab at 鶹ý has collaborated with clinician Dr. Joel Davidson at Akron Children’s Hospital to investigate this problem by providing preventative solutions using novel mapping technologies.
The team used street-by-street mapped data, along with blood/lead level samples to identify and contextualize hotspots of lead exposure. The team then developed methods to help predict where hidden cases may exist.“Our team focused on mapping risks at the individual house level and the immediate surrounding area,” Curtis said. “Currently, health and community leaders only become aware of the problem after a child has been exposed, which is too late. We hope to be able to predict where future exposures may occur.”
Using geographic information system mapping approaches, in combination with other cutting edge geospatial technologies and a neighborhood lead index constructed by Schuch, detailed information about the buildings along a street can be linked to where lead exposure cases have occurred. Once found, these same patterns can be looked for elsewhere.
For 10 years Curtis and his team have been developing spatial video approaches to work on a variety of different health, hazard and crime situations. This technology allows each building to be mapped according to its state of repair.
The video is linked to a global positioning system so what is seen in the field can be mapped in the lab. In this way, telltale visual evidence such as a flaking paint type and general disrepair can be mapped, which when combined with other local data such as housing age, can be used to make predictive maps of lead exposure.
A further development pioneered in the GIS Health and Hazards lab at 鶹ý is the geo-narrative, which adds an expert ride along commentary to the spatial video.
Experts from Summit County Public health have provided invaluable insight into the local lead problem. Using computer code developed by Eric Shook in the High-Performance Computing and GIS Lab at 鶹ý, these narrations can be mapped to lie on top of the neighborhood maps and lead exposure locations.
“These ‘word maps’ help us to visually identify potential problem houses and validate our predictive maps,” Curtis said. “By recording institutional knowledge in this way, we can also identify some of the logistical challenges involved in keeping children free from lead exposure.”
This project is one of several ongoing collaborations between the GIS Health and Hazards lab and Akron Children’s Hospital.
Photo Credit:
Karen Schiely, Akron Beacon Journal