
@article{ref1,
title="Self-reported symptoms of neurotoxicity and agricultural injuries among Ohio cash-grain farmers",
journal="American journal of industrial medicine",
year="2005",
author="Atrubin, David and Bean, Thomas L. and Crawford, J. Mac and Wilkins, J. R.",
volume="47",
number="6",
pages="538-549",
abstract="BACKGROUND: In 1993, the Ohio Farm Family Health and Hazard Surveillance Program (OFFHHSP) was initiated to assess the health status of cash-grain farmers and their families. The objective of this study was to examine the postulated relationship between symptoms of neurotoxicity and risk of agriculture-related injury among Ohio cash-grain farmers. METHODS: A reanalysis of the data from a previously published case-control study of cash-grain farmers [Crawford et al. (1998) Am J Ind Med 34:588-599] was performed. The Principal Operator (PO) of each farm was asked to complete a self-administered questionnaire which included items about injuries experienced during the past year. A section of the questionnaire contained a 24-item instrument (&quot;Q24&quot;) that queried symptoms of neurotoxicity experienced during the previous 12 months. Design-based multiple logistic regression analyses were conducted to evaluate associations between neuropsychological subsets (&quot;domains&quot;) of the 24-item instrument and injury risk among the white male POs (who accounted for >99% of all POs). RESULTS: Significantly elevated odds ratios (ORs) were found in 8 of 11 domains. POs answering in the affirmative to the single item &quot;Have you been bothered by lack of coordination or loss of balance?&quot; were 3.12 times more likely to have reported an injury than POs responding negatively (95% CI 1.68-5.81). CONCLUSIONS: Farmers with higher scores on several Q24 domains, and for particular questionnaire items, appear to be at increased risk of agricultural injury.",
language="",
issn="0271-3586",
doi="10.1002/ajim.20172",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajim.20172"
}