Literature DB >> 7574894

Green tobacco sickness: occupational nicotine poisoning in tobacco workers.

T Ballard1, J Ehlers, E Freund, M Auslander, V Brandt, W Halperin.   

Abstract

In this study the authors describe the investigation of a 1992 outbreak of green tobacco sickness, a form of nicotine poisoning from dermal exposure, among 47 tobacco workers in a five-county region of central and south-central Kentucky. Cases were identified through medical record searches at participating hospitals, as well as from reports submitted to the Occupational Health Nurses in Agricultural Communities program. A case-control study was undertaken to assess risk factors for green tobacco sickness. In a 20-min telephone interview, 40 cases and 83 controls responded to questions contained in a questionnaire. In 1992, 47 persons (3 were under age 16 y) in the study region sought medical treatment for green tobacco sickness. Twelve persons were hospitalized and 2 required intensive-care treatment. The crude incidence in 1992 was 10.0/1,000 tobacco workers. In 1993, 66 cases (7 were under age 16 y) of green tobacco sickness were identified in the study region (i.e., annual incidence of 14.0/1,000). A case-control study demonstrated that ill workers were younger, and were more likely to have worked in wet conditions, compared with workers who were not ill. Green tobacco sickness is a common problem among tobacco workers that may be prevented by avoiding work in wet tobacco or by use of protective clothing. Children younger than 16 y of age represented 9% of the green tobacco sickness cases in 1992 and 1993. Current occupational safety and health laws do not address protection of tobacco workers with respect to green tobacco sickness.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7574894     DOI: 10.1080/00039896.1995.9935972

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Environ Health        ISSN: 0003-9896


  16 in total

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6.  Predictors of incidence and prevalence of green tobacco sickness among Latino farmworkers in North Carolina, USA.

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8.  Permissive nicotine regulation as a complement to traditional tobacco control.

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9.  Tobacco farming in rural Vietnam: questionable economic gain but evident health risks.

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10.  Child labor and environmental health: government obligations and human rights.

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