Literature DB >> 17892073

Pesticide safety training among farmworker adolescents from Starr County, Texas.

E M Shipp1, S P Cooper, D J del Junco, J N Bolin, R E Whitworth, C J Cooper.   

Abstract

This study of adolescent farmworkers describes employer compliance with pesticide safety training, a requirement of the EPA-mandated Worker Protection Standard (WPS), and identifies variables associated with having received training within the prior five years. Data are from "A Study of Work Injuries in Farmworker Children, " a three-year cohort study of high school students living along the Texas-Mexico border in Starr County. Data were collected using a web-based, self-administered, confidential survey. Of 324 students who participated in field work between January 1 and September 30, 2003, 68 (21.0%) reported ever receiving pesticide safety training. Overall, the 61 (18.8%) students who reported training within the prior five years also reported that their most recent instruction covered at least three key WPS areas (i.e., entry into a recently treated field, pesticide-related injuries/illnesses, and emergency care for pesticide exposure). Based on a multiple logistic regression, students who were male (OR = 1.97), worked only outside of Texas (OR = 2.73), worked only for commercial growers/owners (OR = 4.35), worked only for contractors (OR = 3.18), worked corn crops (OR = 2.93), and worked potato crops (OR = 3.11) were more likely to report receipt of training within the prior five years. Results suggest that increased enforcement may be needed, especially in Texas, and special educational efforts may be needed to reach female farmworker youth.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17892073     DOI: 10.13031/2013.23354

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Agric Saf Health        ISSN: 1074-7583


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3.  "Be careful!" Perceptions of work-safety culture among hired Latinx child farmworkers in North Carolina.

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4.  Hired Latinx child farm labor in North Carolina: The demand-support-control model applied to a vulnerable worker population.

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5.  Occupational behaviors and farmworkers' pesticide exposure: findings from a study in Monterey County, California.

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6.  "Pesticides protect the fruit, but not the people": using community-based ethnography to understand farmworker pesticide-exposure risks.

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7.  Oregon indigenous farmworkers: results of promotor intervention on pesticide knowledge and organophosphate metabolite levels.

Authors:  Linda McCauley; Jennifer D Runkle; Julie Samples; Bryan Williams; Juan F Muniz; Marie Semple; Nargess Shadbeh
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8.  Pesticide exposure in children.

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9.  Pesticide exposure among Latinx child farmworkers in North Carolina.

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10.  Occupational Injuries of Latinx Child Farmworkers in North Carolina: Associations With Work Safety Culture.

Authors:  Thomas A Arcury; Sara A Quandt; Taylor J Arnold; Haiying Chen; Stephanie S Daniel
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