AgHealthNews
Issue Number 2002-01
Winter 2002
Published by the UC Agricultural Health & Safety Center at Davis,
University of California, Davis, Marc Schenker, M.D., M.P.H., Director,
Produced by EditPros, Davis, CA
2002-01-01 TABLE OF CONTENTS
- 2002-01-01 Table of Contents
- 2002-01-02 Welcome and Introduction
- 2002-01-03 Center Investigator to Help Develop
Mexico's Train-the-Trainer Program
- 2002-01-04 New Name, And Renewed Funding For
The Next Five Years
- 2002-01-05 Center Awards $26,800 in Research
Funding to UC Davis Graduate Students
- 2002-01-06 NIOSH Publishes New Documents on
Childhood Agricultural Injuries
- 2002-01-07 Industry/University Research Partnerships:
A Win-Win Situation
2002-01-02 WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION
Welcome to the UC Agricultural Health & Safety Center at Davis AgHealthNews.
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2002-01-03 CENTER INVESTIGATOR TO HELP DEVELOP MEXICO'S
TRAIN-THE-TRAINER PROGRAM
Center investigator Jennifer Weber will travel to Mexico this spring
to participate in two pilot train-the-trainer workshops. The purpose
of these workshops is to extend pesticide information and resources
to pesticide safety educators working in Morelos and Sinaloa.
The train-the-trainer workshop program is just one of several
programs being created by federal and state government, and private
agencies in Mexico and the United States, to help spread the word
in Mexico about the harmful effects that pesticides pose for agricultural
workers, consumers and the environment.
According to Grace Robiou of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Mexico and the United States have been working together
on pesticide-related issues for several years through a technical
working group that was formed under the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA). The collaboration between Mexico and the United
States began to take shape in 1999, when Mexico adopted regulations
similar to the United States Worker Protection Standard. Robiou
said, "It was at that time that we decided to coordinate our programs
and activities so we could better serve the needs of the three to
four million permanent and migratory agricultural workers in each
country."
Weber, pesticide safety educator for the Statewide IPM Project
at UC Davis, was invited to assist with these efforts by joining
a pesticide safety project team consisting of agricultural, health
and labo r professionals from Mexico and the United States. Team
members also include Grace Robiou, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency; Luis Alberto Mercado, Ministry of Health (SSA), Mexico;
José Antonio Cabalceta Vara, Ministry of Labor (STPS), Mexico;
Eduardo Rangel Machain, State Plant Protection Committee in Guanajuato
(CESAVEG), Mexico; Jesús López Olvera, Ministry of
Environment and National Resources (SEMARNAT), Mexico; Gustavo González,
Ministry of Agriculture (SAGARPA); and Antonio Rojas, Texas Department
of Agriculture. The group members have been working together for
several months to develop workshops and educational materials offering
teaching techniques and hands-on demonstration methods that pesticide
safety educators can use to create or improve their own programs.
Two separate three-day pilot workshops will be held in Morelos
Feb. 25-27, and in Sinaloa March 4-6. The first two days of each
workshop will consist of discussion of a variety of topics, including
environ-mental protection, health risks of pesticide use, safe pesticide
handling procedures, under-standing and following pesticide label
instructions, personal protective equipment, and effective teaching
methods for adult audiences. Attendees will be given an opportunity
to apply their newly acquired skills on the third day, when they
participate as instructors during an actual training session for
farm workers and pesticide handlers.
Project team members expect that the pilot train-the-trainers
programs will be successful not only in providing information and
resources to current pesticide safety educators, but also as a way
to combine existing efforts to produce a national pesticide program
that can be offered to agricultural workers and rural community
members throughout Mexico.
For more information about the Mexico train-the-trainer project,
you may e-mail Jennifer Weber at jlweber@ucdavis.edu, or call (530)
752-5930.
2002-01-04 NEW NAME, AND RENEWED FUNDING FOR THE NEXT
FIVE YEARS
Research and public education related to farm health and safety issues
recently received a boost in the form of a new $3.8 million grant
from the National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety. The
grant will continue for five years the activities of the Center, which
was recently re-named the Western Center for Agricultural Health and
Safety to better describe its Western regional focus.
"I'm delighted to have a commitment for five more years of support
by the national institute for the important work of the center,"
said Center Director Marc Schenker, M.D., M.P.H. "Healthy farmers
and farm workers are a resource for California and the country,
and it is the goal of this center to prevent injury and promote
wellness in this large and important population."
Schenker noted that UC Davis, with its College of Agricultural
and Environ-mental Sciences, as well as schools of medicine and
veterinary medicine, provides the ideal academic environment for
this type of research and education program. Founded in 1990, the
center is one of 10 agricultural health and safety centers established
in the United States by the Centers for Disease Control to protect
and improve the health and safety of the nation's farmers, farm
workers and consumers. Research at the Davis center has particularly
focused on issues affecting agriculture in the Western United States.
Researchers affiliated with the center have studied ergonomic
issues to prevent injuries in labor-intensive fruit and vegetable
crops, examined exposure to harmful levels of agricultural dust
and pesticide, and designed educational programs to protect children
of farm workers from health and safety hazards. Their work has resulted
in development of new tools and techniques to reduce the stress
and strain of repetitive agricultural tasks, new tests to measure
pesticide exposure, and a new surveillance system to identify situations
that pose a particular risk of respiratory disease to workers.
The center also has developed educational conferences, workshops
and educational seminars to share its research findings with other
farmers and farm workers, health professionals and the general public.
The new grant enables the center to continue existing research
and education projects and to investigate new areas of concern.
2002-01-05 CENTER AWARDS $26,800 IN RESEARCH FUNDING
TO UC DAVIS GRADUATE STUDENTS
This past summer the UC Agricultural Health & Safety Center at Davis
awarded a total of $26,800 in research funding to seven graduate students
identified by principal investigators as engaging in work related
to the Center's mission "to protect and improve the health and safety
of the nation's farmers, farm workers and consumers." On Oct. 5, six
of the students reported on the progress of their research during
a Student Research Seminar held at noon in the Foster Room of Meyer
Hall. Here are synopses of the students' research projects.
Occupational Dust Exposure and Human Lung Pathology in the
Central Valley of California
Michelle Kim
Are Central Valley agricultural workers at higher risk for developing
small-airways disease than non-agricultural workers? Michelle Kim
spent the summer looking for answers. Working with principal investigator
Kent E. Pinkerton, Kim has analyzed 48 of 117 lung tissue samples
collected from Hispanic or Latino males obtained by the Fresno County
Coroner's office. She examined airway branching patterns in the
deposition, retention, and histopathology associated with mineral
dusts in the lung. The median age of the subjects was 29 years,
with an average of 16 years spent in Fresno County. Half of the
subjects had died in motor vehicle accidents, and about a quarter
died from gunshot or stab wounds. None had died of pulmonary disease.
Kim found more silica in the lungs of agricultural workers than
in non-agricultural workers. "Upon analysis, we found a statistically
significant difference between farm workers and non-farm workers
for silica lung burden," said Kim. "We also found significant results
for black pigment burden, fibrosis and mineral dust burden in the
small airways of farm workers." When Kim compared subjects who smoked
to non-smokers for pulmonary fibrosis in the small airways, she
said, "This funding could very well imply that pulmonary fibrosis
in farm workers is independent of smoking, and that dust can play
an important role in lung disease and remodeling." The study is
ongoing.
Validation of Red Blood Cell Ghost (gRBC) for Use with Measurement
of Cholinesterases
Daniel E. Arrieta
Clinical laboratories licensed in the state of California are required
by law to monitor cholinesterase levels in the agricultural workplace.
However, some questions have been raised about the accuracy of the
reported levels. As a result, the state of California mandated all
state clinical laboratories to use the Ellman colorimetric assay
for monitoring pesticides in the agricultural workplace. Under the
guidance of principal investigator Barry W. Wilson, Daniel Arrieta
has been involved with standardizing cholinesterase measurements
in clinical laboratories. "We have reported that only two of 29
clinical laboratories licensed in the state of California were able
to properly monitor cholinesterase," said Arrieta. "In order to
address this issue, we have developed a reliable standard by which
they can evaluate the accuracy of their assay." The standard to
which Arrieta referred to is a red blood cell ghost preparation
developed from bovine blood. Arrieta collected 19 blood samples
from Holstein cows to determine the fraction of cholinesterase enzyme
activity associated with each of the respective blood components
(i.e., plasma, red blood cells). He found that cholinesterase levels
of variability were nominal and that the predominant form of cholinesterase
present in bovine blood appeared to be acetylcholinesterase, enzymes
that are important neuro-transmitters in normal cellular function.
Characterization of Workers' Exposures to Mixed Dust at Vineyards
Jodi Smith
The unique working environment of California farmers places them
at risk for particle exposure. Due to dry farming techniques used
in the Central Valley of California, farm workers are exposed to
high levels of dust through a variety of operations, including vineyard
work. Jodi Smith has been working with principal investigator Kiyoung
Lee on a study that will provide a database for dust exposure as
well as an operation profile for vineyards. "The aims of this study
are to estimate annual dust exposure of vineyard workers, develop
an exposure-task matrix, identify determinant factors of annual
exposure, and develop an exposure indicator using foliar dust,"
said Smith. She has been measuring inhalable and respirable dust
exposure of vineyard workers in the Napa Valley. While in the field,
Smith collected leaf samples to quantify foliar dust. Back at the
laboratory, she uses a dust generator to agitate the leaves within
a rotating chamber. As the air is blown through the chamber and
into a sampling chamber, personal samplers collect the dust particles.
Another method she uses for foliar dust quantification is a leaf
washing technique in which the wash solution is strained through
a filter, which collects the particulate matter. "Our preliminary
data indicates that hand harvest is the highest exposure operation
thus far," she said. "However, our current mean exposure for this
operation seems to be lower than that shown in other studies." The
study is ongoing to capture the entire cycle of vineyard operations.
Impact of School Agriculture Safety Curriculum on Injury Risk
Lisa Scott
While the annual number of farm deaths to children and adolescents
has decreased in recent years, the rate of nonfatal farm injuries
has increased. Approximately 100 children and adolescents die on
U.S. farms each year as a result of accidental injuries, with an
additional 22,000 non-fatal injuries to children under 20 years
of age. Under the direction of Center investigator Stephen McCurdy,
M.D., Scott identified three high schools currently using a state-approved
agricultural education curriculum, and gained approval from school
administrators to conduct focus groups at the schools. Scott discussed
with students the tasks they perform on farms, hours worked, what
they perceive as dangerous, and any injuries they may have suffered
on the farm. She developed a questionnaire based on discussions
with the students. Questionnaires will be disseminated and collected
over a two-year period in this ongoing project. "Our analysis will
focus on addressing the hypothesis that students receiving the safety
portion of the curriculum will have a lower injury risk than their
peers not receiving the safety portion of the curriculum," said
Scott.
SHARE Study Program and Automated Vital Statistics System (AVSS)
Jeffrey Bethel
The Study of Hispanic Acculturation, Reproduction and the Environment
(SHARE), headed by principal investigator Marc Schenker, M.D., M.P.H.,
focuses on the three-fold epidemiological paradox of Latina women
in the United States:
"The goal of this study is to identify acculturation-related risk
factors for preterm and low birth weight deliveries among Latina women
of varying lengths of U.S. residency," said Jeffrey Bethel. His role
in the study is to 1) refine initial interview data, 2) conduct medical
record abstraction of birth outcomes, 3) enter data about birth outcomes,
and 4) assist with data analysis. "Four types of women exist at this
stage of the study: 1) women who delivered in San Joaquin County General
Hospital, 2) women who delivered elsewhere, 3) women who transferred
their prenatal care to Healthy Beginnings, and 4) women whose place
of delivery is unknown. For his analysis, Bethel is utilizing the
state of California's Automated Vital Statistics System (AVSS) to
locate the mothers' hospitals of birth and then request the records.
Every birthing hospital is required by law to be linked with AVSS.
"We will provide the state Office of Vital Records the names of women
whose place of delivery is unknown, and they will run the names through
AVSS to provide the hospitals of birth," said Bethel. "San Joaquin
County General Hospital has agreed to request the records from these
hospitals."
Ergonomic Evaluation of California Winegrape Trellis Systems
Andrew E. Kato
Work-related musculoskeletal disorders of the lower back and upper
extremities account for the most commonly reported injuries in the
winegrape industry. These conditions are likely due to often highly
forceful and repetitive hand-intensive movements combined with frequent
stooped postures. Andrew E. Kato's research with principal investigator
Fadi A. Fathallah focused on a pruning simulation conducted on five
trellis systems-VSP, Lyre, Scott Henry, Smart Dyson and VSP 4x4.
"The main objective of our research is to determine if there are
differences in risk of developing musculoskeletal injuries based
on use of different trellis systems," said Kato. Researchers constructed
the five trellis systems for study and began using the Lumbar Motion
Monitor (LMM) and the Motion Analysis System (MAS) for data collection
purposes. The LMM and MAS are used to track the motion of the spine
in the three principal anatomical planes (sagittal, transverse and
coronal) and to capture kinematic data of the wrist respectively.
"Data collection was completed and analysis is currently in progress,"
said Kato.
2002-2003 Funding
The Center will be awarding new funding for graduate students in
their research and outreach efforts relating to agricultural health
and safety for the 2002-2003 academic year. The upcoming awards
may be up to $15,000 per year for a full year's support; however,
support may also be given for a shorter period, such as over the
summer.
2002-01-06 NIOSH PUBLISHES NEW DOCUMENTS ON CHILDHOOD
AGRICULTURAL INJURIES
Until now, national data on fatal farm injuries occurring to youth
and adolescents in the United States have been limited. This past
summer, the Department of Health and Human Services' Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health (NIOSH) released two new publications related to
childhood agricultural injuries. Fatal Unintentional Farm Injuries
Among Persons Less than 20 Years of Age in the United States: Geographic
Profiles (NIOSH Publication No. 2001-131, July 2001) documents fatal
farm injuries to children as reported in the National Center for Health
Statistics Mortality Data. Injuries include those sustained during
chores, paid work, or recreational activities such as hunting and
swimming. Injuries Among Youth on Farms in the United States 1998
(NIOSH Publication No. 2001-154, June 1001) represents an important
step in understanding the magnitude of youth injuries on farms in
the United States. Data for this publication, which was drawn from
a special survey of farm residents, farm family workers, hired workers,
children of migrant and seasonal workers and farm visitors across
the United States, indicates that nearly 33,000 youths were injured
on farms during 1998, and that the major causes of injury included
falls, animals, and vehicles such as all-terrain vehicles (ATVs).
The Center has a supply of these books, call (530) 752-4050. Other
NIOSH documents are available from Publications Dissemination, EID.
For more information, call (800) 356-4674, or visit the NIOSH home
page at www.cdc.gov/niosh.
2002-01-07 INDUSTRY/UNIVERSITY RESEARCH PARTNERSHIPS:
A WIN-WIN SITUATION
Employers in California pay nearly $11 billion for workers' compensation
insurance, but lately the California insurance industry is paying
out more in claims than it collects in premiums, says Dan M. Hair,
MSS, C.S.P., senior vice president and national director for safety
and health at Zenith Insurance Co. Hair presented a talk titled "Public/Private
Research Partnerships: An Industry Perspective" at the Center's noon
seminar on Nov. 2. Dan Hair, whose roots lie in occupational safety
and health, began his career at The Zenith about 22 years ago as a
field consultant working with employers in the Fresno area. "Having
a better understanding of how injuries occur is definitely in our
best interest," says Hair. "Any research that helps an insurance carrier
understand the dynamics of work-related injury or illness is helpful
to us."
The insurance industry donates hundreds of millions of dollars
a year to charities. "That's money the industry gives with no expectations
back, other than looking and feeling good-as opposed to something
that really might make their business better or might make them
more successful," says Hair. Hair was impressed by the practicality
of the work being done at the Center. He observed, for instance,
that a California employer struggling with the issue of ergonomics
in a nursery setting can turn to the Center for beneficial information
on the subject.
Hair wrote an editorial for the Journal of Agricultural Safety
and Health called "From Business to Humanity: Incentives in Agricultural
Safety." In it he quoted John R. Commons, a Wisconsin industrial
economist of the early 1900s, who was instrumental in some of the
original theories and formulation of workers' compensation laws.
Commons believed that financial incentives could be a motivating
factor in getting business support for employee safety.
Hair asserts that the insurance industry would benefit greatly
by funding research specifically aimed at causes and prevention
of many of the injuries and illnesses that drain its resources.
"We don't understand as well as we would like, for example, why
some people have an injury and recover and some people don't, and
it just devastates their life," says Hair.
Liberty Mutual published the "Workplace Safety Index" to focus
private and public safety research efforts. The top six injuries
that result in the biggest losses to industry are:
1. overexertion-lifting, pushing, pulling, holding, carrying;
2. falls-slipping and falling;
3. bodily reaction-loss of balance and slipping without falling;
4. falls to a lower level;
5. being struck by an object in the workplace; and
6. repetitive motion injuries.
"Our own data is similar to Liberty Mutual's," says Hair. "In
one year we incurred losses of $29 million in lifting injuries.
For us, repetitive motion injuries were number two, with $23 million
in losses. We lost $15 million from cumulative injuries, and if
you lump together several categories that have to do with falls,
our loss was $22 million. If there's some research that is being
done that would enable us to help our policy holders prevent these
injuries, we are interested." A single lower back injury can cost
in excess of $100,000, and Hair contends insurance companies may
be willing to invest in focused research into the causes and prevention
of lower back injuries.
"The industry also could use some help in analyzing our own data,"
he says. "The amount of data that we record every day is immense
and it's difficult to dig down into it to see what it tells us about
injuries. That is something that in cooperation with the academic
community could be a very positive thing for us. We've done some
of that, but we could do more."
Despite the cyclical nature of the insurance business, which forces
the industry into some erratic pricing behaviors and some ups and
downs in profitability, it urgently needs to invest money to help
it better understand the nature of how loss occurs.
"The Zenith is a mid-sized workers' compensation insurance carrier,"
says Hair, "and we have successfully collaborated with academia
in the past and will in the future. I think there is great potential
for private industry and the university to work together to try
to solve some of these problems."
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