IDPH Providing Air Purifiers to
Improve Air Quality in Illinois Head Start Classrooms
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[June 06, 2023]
Governor
JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH)
announced today that the state will be providing more than 1,000
HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) purifiers to Illinois Head
Start and Early Head Start programs around the state to help reduce
the transmission of respiratory viruses, including COVID-19.
In the coming weeks, IDPH will begin delivery of approximately 1,090
air purifiers that will be distributed among 45 different Head Start
programs throughout the state, including Cook County with the
exception of Chicago. The state is also delivering a three-year
supply of replacement filters for the purifiers and 225,000 COVID-19
rapid antigen tests to the Head Start and Early Head Start programs
for distribution to their staff and families served.
IDPH is coordinating the $2 million investment with the Illinois
Head Start Association, which supports the federally funded program
that works to prepare children from low-income families to succeed
in school from birth to age five. The effort builds on a previously
announced IDPH program to provide HEPA air purifiers to K-12 schools
throughout Illinois and is funded through the CDC’s Epidemiology and
Laboratory Capacity for Prevention and Control (ELC) Reopening
Schools funding.
Last month, the CDC released new guidelines for
indoor ventilation that set a specific target for the first time.
The new guidelines call for at least five air changes per hour,
meaning the equivalent of all the air in a room is replaced five or
more times within an hour.
“The health and well-being of our youngest children is a top
priority for my administration,” Governor Pritzker said. “By
providing the means to maintain good air quality in Head Start
classrooms we can prevent illnesses and absences for both children
and teachers and also improve children’s ability to learn and
develop critical skills.”
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“I have devoted much of my career to protecting and
promoting the health of children,” said IDPH Director Dr. Sameer
Vohra, a pediatrician. “The last few years have taught us the
critical importance of good ventilation in preventing the indoor
transmission of viruses and keeping children and adults safe from
respiratory illnesses. These HEPA air purifiers are an important
investment in our children’s present and future. I am very excited
that the State of Illinois will provide tools to keep these very
young kids served by Head Start healthy and in class, helping them
develop, learn, and grow.”
“Illinois’ Head Start program is dedicated to
providing a healthy and safe classroom environment for the children
we serve,” said Head Start Association Executive Director Lauri
Morrison-Frichtl. “By improving ventilation with air purifiers, we
can keep kids in the classroom and accomplish our mission of
preparing these very young children to learn and succeed in the
years to come.”
IDPH is launching an enrollment process that allows
Head Start and Early Head Start grant recipients to submit orders
for portable HEPA air purifiers. The eligible grant recipients will
be contacted directly with information about how many purifiers that
their sites are eligible to receive. The portable air purifiers will
be delivered by mid-July. Grantees will generally be eligible for
one small unit for each classroom, with a limited number of larger
units available for sites that serve more students.
Studies show that cleaner air can reduce absentee rates, and improve
students’ abilities to think, learn, read and solve math problems.
Last year IDPH issued ventilation guidance to educate the community
on the impact of ventilation systems and to provide information
about low cost and DIY interventions for ventilation upgrades.
[Illinois Office of Communication and
Information]
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