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The Health of Farmworkers-Pt. 2. Marc Schenker M.D., M.P.H. Dept. Public Health Sciences, University of California at Davis Director, Western Center for Agricultural Health and Safety. Part II ****. Acute Injuries and Fatalities of Farmworkers. Outline. The hazardous passage
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The Health of Farmworkers-Pt. 2 Marc Schenker M.D., M.P.H. Dept. Public Health Sciences, University of California at Davis Director, Western Center for Agricultural Health and Safety
Part II**** Acute Injuries and Fatalities of Farmworkers
Outline • The hazardous passage • Occupational fatalities among agricultural workers • Animal • Machine/tractor • Transportation • Fatalities of children • Pesticides
Causes of Death Among Latin Immigrants Crossing US Border • During the crossing • Exposure • Drowning • Accidents • Murder • After the crossing • Disease • Injury (occupational)
U.S.-Mexico Border: The Season of Death “The deaths trickle in over the cooler months. A couple here from a rollover. Four dead there during a cold snap. They begin in earnest once the temperature spikes over 100 degrees sometime in May.” PBS Frontline, June 27, 2006
SOURCE: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, 2007
Occupational fatality rates by age group for farming, 1992-2004* * Excludes New York City. Rates calculated by NIOSH and may differ from BLS.
Agriculture Fatality Rate vs. Private Sector, US, 1992 - 2002
Children : The Forgotten Farmworkers “Farmers and Labor Contractors say they allow children to perform field work because the grower needs to get the crop in, parents need the money or children would learn the value of working.” Fresno Bee, 12/14/92
José (22) and Angelica Alatorre and son Guillermo. Jose died while working in a manure pit at Aguiar-Faria & Sons Dairy, Gustine, CA. February 22, 2001
Pesticide Toxicology • Many toxin categories • Affect various organs • Varied health effects Diagram illustrating various pesticide-related health effects.
Definition of Pesticide “Any substance or mixture of substances intended for preventing, destroying, repelling, or mitigating any insects, rodents, nematodes, fungi, or weeds, or any other forms of life declared to be pests; any substance or mixture of substances intended for use as a plant regulator, defoliant, or desiccant.” --Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (US EPA, 1947)
US Pesticide Use • 4.5 billion pounds chemicals per year • 890 active ingredients, 30,000 formulations • Uses • 75% agricultural • 25% home, garden, structural
Agricultural Pesticide Use • High volume: • Hand labor (Western states) • Vineyards • Orchard, row vegetables, nursery • Low volume: • Mechanized (Midwest states) • Livestock insecticide dipping • Grain agriculture
Pesticide Exposure:Occupational Settings • Multiple industries • Agriculture • Emergency response • Maintenance • Transportation • Variety of workers • Applicators, fieldworkers • Firefighters • Medical personnel • Flight attendants NEETF 2002
Pesticide Exposure: Environmental-Occupational Interface • Drift • Off-target physical movement of pesticide through air • Take-home • Contaminated clothing • Pesticide containers brought home
Pesticide Exposure:Environmental Settings • Use in schools • Lawn, garden use • Household cleaning • Home pesticide use • Residues in food
Improper storage or mislabeling of containers Prescription pesticides resembling oral medications Pesticide Exposure: Accidental Ingestion Photo: John P. Lamb, Pharm D., California Poison Control Center Source: EPA Australia
Pesticide Exposure: Suicide/Homicide • Unknown substance • Secondary exposure
Unintentional Pesticide Illness, USA Toxic Exposure Surveillance System 1993-1996
Pesticide Illness Rates Vary by Occupation Organophosphate pesticide poisoning rates by agricultural sector California, 1982--1990 Source: HS-1688, Cal EPA
Pesticide Illness Around the World Annual rates of intentional and unintentional pesticide-related fatalities and hospitalizations in several countries
US EPA Toxicity Classification(Systemic toxicity, eye irritation, skin irritation) • Class I: “Danger” • Fatal if ingested; corneal opacity; corrosive to skin • Class II: “Warning” • May be fatal if ingested; reversible corneal opacity; severe skin irritation • Class III: “Caution” • Harmful if ingested; no corneal opacity; moderate skin irritation • Class IV: “Caution” • May be harmful if ingested; no eye irritation; mild/no skin irritation
Common Components of Pesticide Formulations • Technical grade chemical (active ingredient) • Adjuvants/synergists • “Inert” ingredients • e.g., formaldehyde, sulfuric acid, benzene, toluene, other organic solvents
Diagnosis of Pesticide Illness • Exposure history most important • Occupational and environmental history • Duration, dose, route of potential exposure • Symptom review • Physical exam & lab findings • Health effects may be due to any component of pesticide formulations
Salivation Lacrimation Urination Diarrhea Diarrhea Urination Miosis Bronchorrhea Emesis Lacrimation Salivation Commonly-used Acronyms for Cholinesterase Inhibition Syndromes
Cholinesterase Inhibitors Clinical Presentations Vary • Some signs & symptoms may be absent • Bronchorrhea more likely with high-dose exposures (ingestion) • Common presentations • Nausea, vomiting • Miosis • Sweating, urinary frequency • Non-specific constitutional symptoms
Aspects of History that Suggest Pesticide Illness • Multiple cases • Similar symptoms, exposure history • History of chemical application • Home or office • Accidental ingestion, esp. children • Suicide, homicide attempts
Pesticide Illness Nonspecific Symptoms & Signs • Rash • Flu-like symptoms • Dizziness, malaise, respiratory tract irritation • Gastrointestinal symptoms • Seizures • Odor-related effects • Not toxicological effects of active ingredient
Pesticide Illness May Mimic Common Medical Conditions • Mild: • Upper respiratory tract infection/influenza • Food-borne illness • Asthma • Plant-induced irritant or allergic dermatitis • Severe: • Cerebrovascular accident • Psychiatric dysfunction • Heat stroke
How to Identify Pesticides • Application records • Label • Material Safety Data Sheet • www.msdsonline.com • http://www.ilpi.com/msds/index.html
Sources of Pesticide Information • Internet • EXTOXNET: http://ace.orst.edu/info/extoxnet/ • California Department of Pesticide Regulation: http://www.cdpr.ca.gov/docs/label/labelque.htm • Pesticide Action Network: http://www/pesticideinfo.org/index.html • Textbooks • US EPA. Recognition and Management of Pesticide Poisonings. 1999; 5th ed. http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/safety/healthcare • R Krieger (ed). Handbook of Pesticide Toxicology. 2001; 2nd ed. • Poison Control Centers: 1-800-222-1222 • National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC): 1-800-858-7378 or npic@ace.orst.edu
Treatment of Pesticide IllnessDecontamination • Shower, shampoo • Scrub under fingernails • Contain contaminated clothing, body fluids • Save for residue analysis • Protect treating staff • Body fluid precautions • Personal protective equipment if appropriate
Pesticide IllnessMedical Treatment • Symptomatic treatment • Respiratory distress • Maintain airway, breathing, circulation • Oxygen, bronchodilators if indicated • Ingestion • Gastric lavage, charcoal if indicated • Specific antidotes where applicable
Poison Control Centers • Toxicity • Decontamination • Management • Reporting