Literature DB >> 19744713

Farmworker children's residential non-dietary exposure estimates from micro-level activity time series.

Paloma I Beamer1, Robert A Canales, Asa Bradman, James O Leckie.   

Abstract

Farmworkers' children may have increased pesticide exposure through dermal absorption and non-dietary ingestion, routes that are difficult to measure and model. The Cumulative Aggregate Simulation of Exposure (CASE) model, integrates the complexity of human behavior and variability of exposure processes by combining micro-level activity time series (MLATS) and mechanistic exposure equations. CASE was used to estimate residential non-dietary organophosphate pesticide exposure (i.e., inhalation, dermal, and non-dietary ingestion) to California farmworker children and evaluate the micro-activity approach. MLATS collected from children and distributions developed from pesticide measurements in farmworkers' residences served as inputs. While estimated diazinon exposure was greater for inhalation, chlorpyrifos exposure was greater for the other routes. Greater variability existed between children (sigma(B)(2)=0.22-0.39) than within each child's simulations (sigma(W)(2)=0.01-0.02) for dermal and non-dietary ingestion. Dermal exposure simulations were not significantly different than measured values from dosimeters worn by the children. Non-dietary ingestion exposure estimates were comparable to duplicate diet measurements, indicating this route may contribute substantially to aggregate exposure. The results suggest the importance of the micro-activity approach for estimating non-dietary exposure. Other methods may underestimate exposure via these routes. Model simulations can be used to identify at-risk children and target intervention strategies.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19744713      PMCID: PMC2775084          DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2009.08.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Int        ISSN: 0160-4120            Impact factor:   9.621


  40 in total

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Authors:  Paloma I Beamer; Christina A Elish; Denise J Roe; Miranda M Loh; David W Layton
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8.  Relative pesticide and exposure route contribution to aggregate and cumulative dose in young farmworker children.

Authors:  Paloma I Beamer; Robert A Canales; Alesia C Ferguson; James O Leckie; Asa Bradman
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Review 10.  Identifying important life stages for monitoring and assessing risks from exposures to environmental contaminants: results of a World Health Organization review.

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