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Surveillance of Personal Protective Equipment Practices in Agriculture. Kimberly Faulkner, PhD, MPH for NIOSH and the National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory. Protecting U.S. farm crop workers. Personal Protective Equipment
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Surveillance of Personal Protective Equipment Practices in Agriculture Kimberly Faulkner, PhD, MPH for NIOSH and the National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory
Protecting U.S. farm crop workers • Personal Protective Equipment • Assess practices and barriers to best practices over time • Improve practices to reduce illness
Personal protective equipment A critical last line of defense
Personal protective equipment practices It’s only effective when selected and used correctly
Objectives • Study planning • Assessment of existing knowledge and methods • Development and administration of a standard questionnaire/focus groups
Study Planning • Study scope: Pesticide handlers, practices and barriers • Existing data sources • FLYER • PPE regulations
Study Planning: PPE regulations • EPA WPS: • 40 CFR 170.170.7, 170.240(c), 170.232 (a)(2), 170.230.b.1 • Certification of Pesticide Applicators: 40 CFR 171 • Labeling Requirements for Pesticides: 40CFR 156 • OSHA Standard for Agriculture: 29 CFR 1928 • OSHA PPE standards: 29CFR 1910.132-1910.136, and 1910.138
Study Planning: Summary • Examine existing knowledge and do pre-assessment work on barriers • Identify partners and pool resources • Develop and administer questionnaire/focus groups • Develop and administer interventions
Objectives • Study planning • Assessment of existing knowledge and methods • Development and administration of a standard questionnaire
Assessing existing knowledge • National Agricultural Workers Study (NAWS) • NIOSH Sentinel Event Notification System for Occupational Risk (SENSOR) • Oregon OSHA Pesticide Emphasis Program
Assessing existing knowledge: NAWS • National sample, 1,230 interviews addressing PPE (1999-2001); 99% complete • PPE appropriateness not known • Using PPE correctly not known
Assessing existing knowledge: SENSOR • Pesticide illnesses reported in 12 states • Only OR, WA, MI collected PPE data on at least 79% of cases (2001-05), N=178 • PPE appropriateness not known • Using PPE correctly not known
Assessing existing knowledge: OR OSHA • Programmed inspection data • Oregon PPE regulations (EPA WPS & OSHA respiratory protection standard adopted in 2007) • Percent of establishments in violation of PPE regulations • Most common regulations violated • Doesn’t tell us about individual practices or barriers
Assessing existing knowledge: OR OSHA/Methods • 348 programmed first inspections (of 375) from 2000 to 2007 • Applicable regulations: 1910.132-138, 170.240 • 3 industries = 95% of inspections • fruit and tree nut farming • greenhouse/nursery/floriculture production, • other crop farming • 1-10 employees = 55% of inspections
Assessing existing knowledge: OR OSHA/Summary • PPE violations are common and frequent, many are serious • Appropriateness of PPE for the establishment • Proper use of PPE for the establishment • Individual PPE practices and barriers are not known
Objectives • Study planning • Assessment of existing knowledge and methods • Development and administration of a standard questionnaire/focus groups
Develop and administer standard • Questionnaires and focus groups (as appropriate) • Appropriate /inappropriate PPE • Appropriate use/misuse of PPE
Develop and administer standard • Appropriate/inappropriate PPE • EPA registration number for pesticides • or manufacturers specific name of pesticide • Relevant environmental controls • Duration of exposure • Type(s) and material(s) of PPE worn when mixing, loading or applying pesticides • If respirator used: NIOSH certification number • If applying pesticides: methods of application
Develop and administer standard • Proper use/misuse of PPE • proper size/fit • maintenance • inspection • storage • discarding PPE as required • clean area to put on and remove PPE • decontamination • For respirator users: lack of fit testing, medical evaluation, user-seal check, and proper filter replacement
Develop and administer standard • PPE concerns and barriers • For each type of PPE and handler group: What are the concerns, barriers and solutions? • Handler groups • commercial certified applicator • private certified applicator (Hispanic and Non-hispanic) • non-certified/WPS handler (Hispanic and Non-hispanic) • Anabaptist/Amish communities • Flyers: 17 emails and 4 phone calls
Develop and administer standard: Surveillance 2012, 2013, … 2012, 2013, … 2012, 2013, …
Develop and administer standard • Partnerships • EPA/OR OSHA • State Cooperative Extension services • State Offices of Rural Health • State Departments of Health/Agriculture • PNASH • Farmworker Association of Florida
Develop and administer standard: Next steps (Apr. 2010-Apr. 2011) • Expand/strengthen partnerships • Brainstorm with partners • Identify PPE concerns and barriers • Develop gold standard (questionnaire/focus groups) • Identify opportunities and challenges • Identifying and secure resources
Develop and administer standard: Summary • We need your help • How to access handlers and employers? • What are critical elements needed to assess practices? • What are the tools/methods to best be able to assess practices? • The benefit to you… • Results will inform educational and training outreach • Improved compliance and possibly reduced illnesses
Contact me Kimberly Faulkner, PhD, MPH Epidemiologist/Statistician NIOSH/National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory P.O. Box 18070 Pittsburgh, PA 15236-0070 Tele: 412-386-6609 Email: KFaulkner@cdc.gov