Bill

Bill > A1692


NJ A1692

NJ A1692
Revises and codifies schedule for childhood lead screenings.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would strengthen the existing State requirements for childhood lead screening by: (1) codifying, in the statutory law, the existing schedule for childhood lead screening that appears in regulations adopted by the Department of Health (DOH); and (2) allowing health care professionals to perform lead screenings at the point-of-care, in the regular course of a well visit. The bill would specify, in particular, that every physician, registered professional nurse, or health care facility, agency, or program that is subject to the State's childhood elevated blood lead level prevention laws will be required to perform a lead screening on each patient between six months and 26 months of age to whom services are provided, during the course of a well visit, in accordance with the following schedule: 1) when the child is between nine and 18 months of age; preferably on the date of, or as close as possible to, the child's first birthday; and 2) at least six months after the first lead screening test, when the child is between 18 and 26 months of age; preferably on the date of, or as close as possible to, the child's second birthday. A physician, registered professional nurse, or health care facility, agency, or program performing a lead screening in accordance with this schedule will be authorized to perform the screening on-site, at the point of care, during the course of a well visit. The physician, registered professional nurse, or health care facility, agency, or program performing lead screening will be required to record in the child's permanent health record the date on which the lead screening test was administered and the results of the test. The bill requires the DOH to modify its existing lead screening public information campaign to inform the parents and guardians of small children, as well as physicians, registered professional nurses, and other health care providers, about the lead screening schedule and requirements, and the conditions for initial school enrollment, established by the bill. The bill additionally requires the DOH to establish an educational outreach campaign providing the same information to the same populations. Any information or documentation that is prepared for the public information and educational outreach campaigns is to be posted at a publicly accessible location on the DOH Internet website. The bill clarifies that any DOH regulations adopted pursuant to P.L.1995, c.316 (C.17:48E-35.10 et al.), concerning the provision of insurance coverage for lead screenings, are to be consistent with the revisions to the State's lead screening laws adopted under the bill.

AI Summary

This bill strengthens existing state requirements for childhood lead screenings by codifying the schedule for these screenings into law, which was previously only in regulations from the Department of Health (DOH). It mandates that healthcare professionals, including physicians and registered professional nurses, must perform lead screenings on children between six months and 26 months of age during regular well visits, specifically around their first and second birthdays. These screenings can be done on-site at the point of care, and the results must be recorded in the child's permanent health record. The bill also requires the DOH to conduct public information and educational outreach campaigns to inform parents, guardians, and healthcare providers about these new screening requirements and schedule, with all campaign materials to be posted online. Additionally, it ensures that insurance coverage regulations for lead screenings align with these updated state laws.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Children, Families and Food Security Committee (on 01/13/2026)

bill text


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