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This paper explores the risks for occupational injuries among women in agriculture within the contexts of gender roles and Haddon's Injury Model.
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Womenin Agriculture: Risks for Occupational Injury within the Contexts of Role and Haddon’s Injury Model Carrie A. McCoy Northern Kentucky University Ann K. Carruth Southeastern Louisiana University Deborah B. Reed University of Kentucky
Introduction • Exposure to injury-producing events in the context of gendered role and Haddon’s Injury Model • According to Haddon, injuries do not occur by accident (Haddon, 1968).
Haddon’s Injury Model was used as the framework for this paper. • Prevent • Event • Post Event Host Agent Environment Haddon, 1968
Profile of Farm Women • 23.1% of farm operators and managers and 19% of farm workers are female (Statistical Abstracts of U.S. 1998). • Women operated 165,102 farms (8.6% of all farms) (USDA, 1999). • Over half list an occupation other than farming as their principal occupation.
Profile of Farm Women • Older on average than male counterparts • Operated smaller farms • 43% less than 50 acres • 68.5% had sales less than $10,000
Women’s Contributions to Agriculture • Invisible Farmers • invisibility of farm women’s work • gendered division of labor on the farm • More daughters are entering farming
Role • Managers • Taylor (1997) • 41% husbands’ assistants • 34% silent partners • 22 hours working on farm • Reed (1999) 46% homemakers engaged in farm work
Participation in Farm Tasks • Conditioned by • individual self-identified role • self-efficacy • Agricultural partners and producers more involved in farm tasks
Other Factors Affecting Participation in Farm Tasks • Size of farm • Farm Commodity • Marital status • Control of land • Husband’s off farm work • Education level • Previous farming experience
Injury Risk in Context of Host, Agent, Environment • Pre-event exposure to multitude of biologic, chemical, physical, and mechanical agents • Uncontrolled transfer of energy during event phase is dependent on host, catalyst (agent) that produces outcome, and the environment.
Host Risks for Injury-Social Cultural • Role identity • Self-efficacy • Perceived vulnerability to injury • Knowledge and beliefs (Leckie,1996; Zeuli & Levins 1995)
Host Risk for Injury Physical Factors • Age • Physical stature • Physical health status • Use of medications • Fatigue and stress • May be more susceptible to some types of injuries • Falls (Carruth et.al., 2001; Nordstrom et al., 1996; McCoy, 2000) • Pronator syndrome (Stal, Hagert & Moritz, 1998)
Vehicle/Vectors of Injury • Machinery • PTOs (MMWR, 1992; Roerig, 1993) • Design issues • Exposure (Carruth et al., 2001) • Presence of large animals (Browning et al.; 1998; Carruth et al., 2001; McCoy 2000; Myers, et al., 1999; Steuland et al.; 1997)
Environmental Risks • Physical environment • Risk of falls • Temperature extremes • Caring for animals • Dairy farming - (Boyle et al., 1997; Nordstrom et al., 1995) • Cultural environment • Cultural norms regarding division of labor • Economic pressures - third-shift phenomenon
Limitations • Mostly descriptive in nature • Studies have focused on the injury event • Few studies have targeted women • Most limited to one geographic area • Definition of injury inconsistent across studies • Selection criteria different across studies • Many based on hospital data
Limitations • Injury in the context of role has not been addressed • Inconsistent injury rates compared to men • Quantitative data with very little qualitative triangulation.
Recommendations • Examine relationship between host, agent and environment • Focus on the pre-event phase • Examine roles and risk for occupational injury • Ergonomics and musculoskeletal injury • Improved links between quantitative and qualitative (narrative) data.
Acknowledgements • National Institute for Nursing Research, National Research Service Award • Cooperative agreement with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.