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Lead Hazard

Lead poisoning is most commonly caused by breathing or swallowing the leaded dust that is generated from chipping, flaking, or peeling lead-based paint. Over 80% of all homes built before 1978 in the U.S. contain lead-based paint. Other sources of lead poisoning include imported goods and beauty products, home remedies (typically red or orange powders), and travel outside the United States. Some jobs and hobbies may also increase lead exposure.

Ashland zip codes 44805, 44842, and 44851 have been identified as high risk zip codes. Ohio law (OAC 3701-30) requires all healthcare providers to administer a blood lead screening test to children at age 1 and 2, or up to age 6 if no previous test has been completed based on the following criteria: the child is on Medicaid, lives in a high-risk zip code, or has certain other risk factors.

A blood test is the only way to identify lead poisoning, as symptoms (stomach aches, headaches, tiredness, low iron) are often mistaken for other illnesses. Some children with lead poisoning may not look or act sick. Ask your doctor about a blood test, or contact us at 419-282-4357 if you don’t have a doctor.

Prevent Lead Poisoning

  1. Use a vacuum with a HEPA filter and change the filter according to the manufacturer’s recommendation.
  2. Wash floors and window sills often.
  3. Dust with a damp cloth and use a wet mop.
  4. Wash toys.
  5. Test your house for lead before removing paint or remodeling.
  6. Avoid peeling or chipping lead paint and contact a lead contractor.
  7. Avoid dry sanding or using a heat gun to remove old lead paint.
  8. Replace vinyl or plastic mini blinds made outside of the U.S., or wash them weekly. Products made in other countries may be made with lead.
  9. Wash your hands often and make sure your children wash their hands.
  10. Leave your shoes at the door.
  11. Change out of your work clothes before entering your house if you are exposed to lead at work.
  12. Test your well water for lead by contacting us at 419-282-4337.
  13. Flush your pipes with cold water for 1 to 2 minutes if water hasn’t been used for 6 hours or more.
  14. If drinking tap water, make sure it is cold.

These foods can help lower your child’s lead level:

  1. Vitamin C: tomatoes, strawberries, oranges, potatoes
  2. Calcium: milk, cheese, yogurt
  3. Iron: chicken, steak, fish, peas, eggs

Please call 419-282-4357 if you have questions or concerns about lead poisoning. 

Birth and Death Records

A certificate costs $25. Additional service fees may apply depending on how you purchase your certificate:

In Person Option
For immediate service, you can visit our office at 1211 Claremont Avenue Monday – Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Before issuing the certificate, we will ask you to complete a request form. We accept cash, checks, money orders, credit and debit cards. Please note a picture ID is required if you are writing a personal check. No out-of-state personal checks will be accepted.

Online Purchase Option: VitalChek
VitalChek is a service of VitalCheck Network, Inc., an independent company. An additional fee of $7.00 is charged by VitalChek. Please note the VitalChek website automatically defaults to a local service charge of $17.50 for a 2 day overnight fee, so remove the check mark to avoid this extra fee. We mail the birth/death certificates as soon as we receive the paid request.

Mail Option
You may print and complete the Application for Certified Copies Birth Certificate Request Form or Death Certificate Request Form and mail it to: Ashland County Health Department, 1211 Claremont Avenue, Ashland, Ohio 44805. You must include a money order or check payable to the Ashland County Health Department. Please note, that we can only issue certified death certificates for individuals who died in Ashland County. We can issue certified birth certificates for any county in the State of Ohio.

Or, instead of completing the Application for Certified Copies, you could send payment along with a letter of request that includes the following:

    1. Birth/death name and date of event
    2. Daytime phone number
    3. Self-addressed, stamped envelope
    4. Payment

Following is additional information you may find helpful:

  1. Affidavits for correction and Acknowledgement of Paternity may be filed in Vital Statistics.
  2. The certification of birth issued by the hospital is NOT an official, certified birth certificate and cannot be used as legal identification.
  3. Records brought to Vital Statistics cannot be stamped, sealed or copied.
  4. We do not maintain marriage or divorce records. These records are available at Probate Court, located in the Ashland County Courthouse.
  5. You will also need to visit Probate Court for birth certificate name changes.

Please call 419-282-4231 to speak with our Vital Statistics staff.

Disclaimer:
Local and state Vital Statistics Offices must comply with Federal regulations. As federal and state laws change, older birth certificates may have to be replaced as certain federal agencies will begin to refuse to accept these older certificates. Replacement certificates will be available at the prevailing rate for Certified Copies.

Communicable Diseases

The Ohio Administrative Codes require cases of certain communicable or highly contagious diseases to be reported to local health departments:

3701-3-02
3701-3-05 
3701-3-12

How to report

  1. Review the Ohio Infectious Disease Control Manual for specific reporting information and educational materials about the suspected disease.
  2. Complete the Disease Reporting Form
  3. Fax your report to 419-282-4271
  4. Contact us Monday – Friday, 8 a.m. – 4 p.m. at 419-282-4357. Please call 419-685-6395 for after-hours Class A reporting.

Food Safety/Restaurant Inspections

Food Service Operations

Food facilities are licensed as Risk Level I, II, III, or IV. Risk levels reflect the potential risk that a facility poses to public health and are based on the highest risk level activity of the food service operation/food establishment in accordance with the following criteria:

Risk Level I

Risk level I poses potential risk to the public in terms of sanitation, food labeling, sources of food, storage practices, or expiration dates. Examples of risk level I activities include, but are not limited to, an operation that offers for sale or sells:

  • Coffee, self-serve fountain drinks, or prepackaged non-time/temperature controlled for safety beverages.
  • Pre-packaged refrigerated or frozen time/temperature controlled for safety foods.
  • Pre-packaged non-time/temperature controlled for safety foods.
  • Baby food or formula.

Risk Level II

Risk level II poses a higher potential risk to the public than risk level I because of hand contact or employee health concerns but minimal possibility of pathogenic growth exists. Examples of risk level II activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Handling, heat treating, or preparing non-time/temperature controlled for safety food.
  • Holding for sale or serving time/temperature controlled for safety food at the same proper holding temperature at which it was received.
  • Heating individually packaged, commercially processed time/temperature controlled for safety foods for immediate service.

Risk Level III

Risk level III poses a higher potential risk to the public than risk level II because of the following concerns: proper cooking temperatures, proper cooling procedures, proper holding temperatures, contamination issues or improper heat treatment in association with longer holding times before consumption, or processing a raw food product requiring bacterial load reduction procedures in order to sell it as ready-to-eat. Examples of risk level III activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Handling, cutting, or grinding raw meat products.
  • Cutting or slicing ready-to-eat meats and cheeses.
  • Assembling or cooking time/temperature controlled for safety food that is immediately served, held hot or cold, or cooled.
  • Operating a heat treatment dispensing freezer.
  • Reheating in individual portions only.
  • Heating of a product, from an intact, hermetically sealed package and holding it hot.

Risk Level IV

Risk level IV poses a higher potential risk to the public than risk level III because of concerns associated with: handling or preparing food using a procedure with several preparation steps that includes reheating of a product or ingredient of a product where multiple temperature controls are needed to preclude bacterial growth; offering as ready-to-eat a raw time/temperature controlled for safety meat, poultry product, fish, or shellfish or a food with these raw time/temperature controlled for safety items as ingredients; using freezing as a means to achieve parasite destruction; serving a primarily high risk clientele including immuno-compromised or elderly individuals in a facility that provides either health care or assisted living; or using time in lieu of temperature as a public health control for time/temperature controlled for safety food or performs a food handling process that is not addressed, deviates, or otherwise requires a variance for the process. Examples of risk level IV activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Reheating bulk quantities of leftover time/temperature controlled for safety food more than once every seven days.
  • Caterers or other similar food service operations that transport time/temperature controlled for food safety.

Mobiles

Mobiles are licensed as either low risk or high risk. Risk levels reflect the potential risk that mobiles pose to public health and are based on the highest risk level activity in accordance with the following criteria:

Low Risk

Low risk poses a potential risk to the public in terms of sanitation, food labeling, sources of food, and food storage practices in the mobile. Low risk activities include:

  • Holding for sale or service pre-packaged refrigerated or frozen time/temperature controlled for safety foods.
  • Offering for sale or serving pre-packaged non-time/temperature controlled for safety foods.

High Risk

High risk poses a higher potential risk to the public than low risk because of concerns associated with: proper receiving, holding, and cooking temperatures; proper cooling procedures; processing a raw food that has undergone parasite or bacterial load reduction procedures in order to sell or serve it as ready-to-eat; handling or preparing food using a procedure with several preparation steps that includes reheating of a product or ingredient of a product where multiple temperature controls are needed to preclude bacterial growth; offering as ready-to-eat a raw time/temperature controlled for safety meat, poultry product, fish, or shellfish; or a food with these raw time/temperature controlled for safety items as ingredients; or using time in lieu of temperature as a public health control for time/temperature controlled for safety food. Examples of high-risk activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Assembling or cooking time/temperature controlled for safety food that is immediately served, held hot or cold, or cooled.
  • Operating a heat treatment dispensing freezer.
  • Reheating bulk quantities or individual portions of leftover time/temperature controlled for safety food.
  • Heating food from an intact, hermetically sealed package and holding it hot.
  • Operating as a mobile catering food service operation as defined in paragraph (L) of rule 3701-21-01 of the Administrative code.

Retail Food Establishment

Food facilities are licensed as Risk Level I, II, III, or IV. Risk levels reflect the potential risk that a facility poses to public health and are based on the highest risk level activity of the retail food establishment in accordance with the following criteria:

Risk Level I

Risk level I poses potential risk to the public in terms of sanitation, food labeling, sources of food, storage practices, or expiration dates. Examples of risk level I activities include, but are not limited to, an operation that offers for sale or serves:

  • Coffee, self-service hot beverage dispenser drinks, self-service fountain drinks, prepackaged non-time/temperature controlled for safety food beverages.
  • Pre-packaged refrigerated or frozen time/temperature controlled for safety food.
  • Fresh unprocessed fruits and vegetables.
  • Pre-packaged non-time/temperature controlled for safety food.
  • Baby food or formula.

A “food delivery operation” and a “micro market” shall be classified as risk level I.

Risk Level II

Risk lever II poses a higher potential risk to the public than risk level I because of hand contact or employee health concerns but minimal possibility of pathogenic growth exists. Examples of risk level II activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Handling, heat treating, or preparing non-time/temperature controlled for safety foods.
  • Holding for sale or serving time/temperature controlled for safety food at the same proper holding temperature at which it was received.
  • Heating individually packaged, commercially processed time/temperature controlled for safety food for immediate service.
  • Hand dipping of commercially manufactured ice cream.

Risk Level III

Risk level III poses a higher potential risk to the public than risk level II because of the following concerns: proper cooking temperatures, proper cooling procedures, proper holding temperatures, contamination issues or improper heat treatment in association with longer holding times before consumption, or processing a raw food product requiring bacterial load reduction procedures in order to sell the product as ready-to-eat. Examples of risk level III activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Handling, cutting, or grinding raw meat products.
  • Cutting or slicing ready-to-eat meats and cheeses.
  • Assembling, partially cooking, or cooking time/temperature controlled for safety food that is immediately served, held hot or cold, or cooled.
  • Operating a soft serve ice cream or frozen yogurt machine.
  • Reheating in individual portions only.
  • Heating of a product from an intact hermetically sealed package and holding the product hot.

Risk Level IV

Risk level IV poses a higher potential risk to the public than risk level III because of concerns associated with handling or preparing food using a procedure with several preparation steps that includes reheating of a product or ingredient of a product where multiple temperature controls are needed to preclude bacterial growth. Examples of risk level IV activities include, but are not limited to:

  • Reheating bulk quantities of leftover time/temperature controlled for safety food more than once every seven days.
  • Operating a heat treatment dispensing freezer.
  • Catering food service operations as defined in division (G) of section 3717.01 of the Revised Code.
  • Offering as ready-to-eat a raw time/temperature controlled for safety animal food or food with these raw ingredients.
  • Using freezing as a means to achieve parasite destruction.
  • Preparing food for a primarily high-risk clientele including immune-compromised or elderly individuals in a facility that provides either health care or assisted living.
  • Using time as a public health control for time/temperature controlled for safety food.
  • Non-continuous cooking of raw time/temperature controlled for safety food.
  • Performing activities requiring a HACCP plan, as defined in paragraph (B)(52) of rule 3717-1-01 of the Administrative Code.
  • Activities requiring a variance for the process.