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The California Agricultural Worker Health Survey. Conducted by the California Institute for Rural Studies Funded by The California Endowment. Investigators and Key Staff. David Lighthall, Executive Director Don Villarejo, Founder & Director Emeritus Bonnie Bade, Co-investigator
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The California Agricultural Worker Health Survey Conducted by the California Institute for Rural Studies Funded by The California Endowment
Investigators and Key Staff • David Lighthall, Executive Director • Don Villarejo, Founder & Director Emeritus • Bonnie Bade, Co-investigator • Steve McCurdy, Co-investigator • Richard Mines, Co-investigator • Steve Samuels, Project Statistician • Daniel William III, Project Coordinator • Ann Souter, Senior Site Coordinator
Random Selection of Subjects • Communities – Five of six agricultural regions represented by randomly selected community sites. • Dwellings – Enumeration of ALL places (dwellings) in each community where farmworkers are found to reside; then randomly select dwellings to contact. • Residents – Enumeration of ALL eligible persons in randomly selected dwellings; then random selection of one or more residents to be subjects.
Qualifications of Subjects • Age 18 years or older • Performed hired farm work in the previous twelve months • No limit on duration of farm employment • Livestock & crop work of any type • Exclude off-farm food processing
CAWHS Survey Components • Main Survey Instrument, In Dwelling, 1 ½ to 2 hours, Interviewer • Physical Examination, At Clinic, 20 to 30 minutes, Medical Staff, By Appointment, Transportation Provided • Risk Behavior Instrument, At Clinic, 20 to 30 minutes, Interviewer, Private Room
CAWHS Main Instrument • Household Composition • Personal Demographics • Health Services Utilization • Self-reported Health Conditions • Doctor-reported Health Conditions • Work History • Income and Living Conditions
CAWHS Main Instrument (continued) • Workplace Health Conditions • Protective Equipment & Safety Training • Working With Pesticides in the U.S.A. • Field Sanitation • Work Related Injuries and Injury Module • Immigration Status
CAWHS Physical Examination • Biometric • Dental • Skin • Body • Screening • Blood Chemistry • Medical History
Risk Behavior • Health Habits (alcohol, tobacco) • Domestic Violence • Workplace Violence & Workplace Risks • Sexual Behaviors • Drug Use • Mental & Psychological Illness • Reproductive Health (female only)
Conclusions: Occupational Safety and Health 1. High level of non-compliance with Worker Protection Standard pesticide training regulations. 2. For workers who are trained, the quality of WPS training is questionable: Multiple sources of training with a high proportion of workers receiving inadequate training. 3. Evidence that lateral, airborne pesticide drift is common, suggesting weak compliance with WPS pesticide application rules. • Overall, WPS appears relatively ineffective. • High rates of musculoskeletal complaints: 66% reported chronic M-S pain in past year. • Clear evidence of need for better eye protection: 22% report chronic eye irritation.
Conclusions: Access to Care and Chronic Disease • Strikingly high proportions of workers who have rarely or never been to doctor, dentist, or optom. • Major problems of access to preventative and primary care: Dental, musculoskeletal (back, etc.), vision are perhaps the most serious. • Little affordable employer-provided health insurance, low levels of MediCal participation. • Cultural traditions of health care are being confronted by emergence of new chronic diseases tied to dietary changes in Mexico and the U.S. • Genetic predisposition (diabetes) and high rates of obesity increase long-term risk to heart disease, hypertension, stroke, and diabetes. • Looming long-term health costs for county and state health system if access to preventative and primary care is not dramatically improved.