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Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
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Title: Pesticide-related health problems and farmworkers. Author: Moses M. Journal: AAOHN J; 1989 Mar; 37(3):115-30. PubMed ID: 2647086. Abstract: 1. Migrant and seasonal farmworkers are primarily ethnic minorities who are excluded from federal laws that protect other workers. Farmworkers live and work under substandard conditions that place them at increased risk of pesticide-related illness. 2. Agriculture uses 80% of all pesticides in the U.S. Handlers who mix, load and apply pesticides as well as workers cultivating and harvesting crops sprayed with them are at risk of acute poisoning or even death from their exposures. Drift and run-off of agricultural pesticides pollute the air, soil and water, creating additional hazards to workers' families, community residents, and the environment. 3. Chronic effects, including cancer in adults and children, adverse reproductive outcomes, delayed neuropathy and neurobehavioral effects, are also associated with occupational and environmental exposure to pesticides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]