| Literature DB >> 23736739 |
Manjula Weerasinghe1, Melissa Pearson, Ravi Peiris, Andrew H Dawson, Michael Eddleston, Shaluka Jayamanne, Suneth Agampodi, Flemming Konradsen.
Abstract
In 15% to 20% of self-poisoning cases, the pesticides used are purchased from shops just prior to ingestion. We explored how pesticide vendors interacted with customers at risk of self-poisoning to identify interventions to prevent such poisonings. Two strategies were specifically discussed: selling pesticides only to farmers bearing identity cards or customers bearing pesticide 'prescriptions'. Vendors reported refusing to sell pesticides to people thought to be at risk of self-poisoning, but acknowledged the difficulty of distinguishing them from legitimate customers; vendors also stated they did want to help to improve identification of such customers. The community did not blame vendors when pesticides used for self-poison were purchased from their shops. Vendors have already taken steps to restrict access, including selling low toxic products, counselling and asking customer to return the next day. However, there was little support for the proposed interventions of 'identity cards' and 'prescriptions'. Novel public health approaches are required to complement this approach.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23736739 PMCID: PMC3963527 DOI: 10.1136/injuryprev-2012-040748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inj Prev ISSN: 1353-8047 Impact factor: 2.399
Characteristics of the 22 selected pesticide shops, grouped according to their size and function
| Small scale (n=3) | Medium scale (n=16) | Large scale (n=3) |
|---|---|---|
| Typically unregistered | Government registered | Government registered |
| Located in rural villages | Located either in small towns or rural villages | Shops were always located in larger towns near agricultural areas |
| Often untrained vendors involved in selling pesticides | Trained vendors involved in selling pesticides | Several trained vendors were directly involved in the business |
| Some of these vendors are part time | Most common type of shop | Sell pesticides for a wholesale price to small-scale and medium-scale pesticide shops and also directly to farmers |
| Newer shops and were operating for less than 5 years | Primarily there was one person involved in selling pesticides | Offer attractive discounts |
| Pesticides sales are the main business and often only specific brands of certain companies are available | At times others in the household may also sell | Normally, customers exceed 100 per day |
| Pesticides sales are the main business and often they had available only specific brands of certain companies | They offer free consultancy services to select the correct pesticides | |
| The shops have direct links with pesticide companies |
Barriers and facilitating factors identified by vendors for interventions involving vendors to prevent self-poisoning in rural Sri Lanka
| Barriers | Facilitators |
|---|---|
| No community pressure to change sales practices | Vendors reported willingness to participate in training initiatives about self-poisoning |
| No training or support to identify or respond to customers attempting to access pesticides for self-harm | Willingness of some vendors to support prevention, for example, intensive questioning, offering support to distressed customers |
| Difficult to identify individuals for self-poisoning where there is no visible distress | Vendors capable of identifying vulnerable customers who may go on to self-harm |
| Difficult for large-scale vendors who may not be connected to the community to identify individuals risk |