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Journal Article

Citation

Alavanja MC, Sprince NL, Oliver E, Whitten P, Lynch CF, Gillette PP, Logsden-Sacket N, Zwerling CS. Am. J. Ind. Med. 2001; 39(6): 557-563.

Affiliation

Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, NCI, 6120 Executive Blvd.(EPS), Rm. 8000, Rockville, MD, USA. alavanjm@mail.nih.gov

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11385639

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A nested case-control analysis of high pesticide exposure events (HPEEs) was conducted using the Iowa farmers enrolled in the Agricultural Health Study (AHS). METHODS: In the 12 months of the study, 36 of the 5,970 farmer applicators randomly chosen from the AHS cohort (six per 1,000 farmer applicators per year) met our definition of an HPEE, by reporting "an incident with fertilizers, weed killers, or other pesticides that caused an unusually high personal exposure" resulting in physical symptoms or a visit to a health care provider or hospital. Eligibility criteria were met by 25 HPEE cases and 603 randomly selected controls. RESULTS: Significant risk factors for an HPEE included: poor financial condition of the farm which limited the purchase of rollover protective structures OR = 4.6 (1.5-16.6), and having a high score on a risk acceptance scale OR = 3.8 (1.4-11.2). Other non-significant factors were also identified. CONCLUSIONS: The limited statistical power of this study necessitates replication of these analyses with a larger sample. Nonetheless, the observed elevated odds ratios of an HPEE provide hypotheses for future studies that may lead to preventive action.

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