“…Parents' perceived screening benefits depend on several factors, including information about exposure risk, degree of risk aversion, degree of altruism towards the child, 7 beliefs about treatment costs and feasibility (which may correlate with home-ownership) as well as recovery 6 Case management occurs mostly at home and includes nutritional education and information about reducing exposure in the home, a home inspection, and referral to lead remediation services, which are generally subsidized for low-income households. Billings & Schnepel (2018) show that such case management fully reverses lead poisoning damages in a sample of North Carolina children. 7 The evidence on how much parents value reductions in their children's health risk relative to reductions in their own risk is mixed (see for example, Gerking & Dickie 2013, Gerking et al 2014 probability, 8 and additional benefits from visiting the doctor, such as having a physical examination or an immunization shot.…”