• Title of article

    Characteristics of Pesticide Use in a Pesticide Applicator Cohort: The Agricultural Health Study,

  • Author/Authors

    Michael C. R. Alavanja، نويسنده , , Dale P. Sandler PhD، نويسنده , , Cheryl J. McDonnell، نويسنده , , Charles F. Lynch، نويسنده , , Margaret Pennybacker، نويسنده , , Shelia Hoar Zahm، نويسنده , , David T. Mage، نويسنده , , William C. Steen، نويسنده , , Wendy Wintersteen، نويسنده , , Aaron Blair، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    172
  • To page
    179
  • Abstract
    Data on recent and historic pesticide use, pesticide application methods, and farm characteristics were collected from 35,879 restricted-use pesticide applicators in the first 2 years of the Agricultural Health Study, a prospective study of a large cohort of private and commercial licensed pesticide applicators that is being conducted in Iowa and North Carolina. (In Iowa, applicators are actually “certified,” while in North Carolina they are “licensed”; for ease of reference the term license will be used for both states in this paper.) Commercial applicators (studied in Iowa only) apply pesticides more days per year than private applicators in either state. When the types of pesticides being used by different groups are compared using the Spearman coefficient of determination (r2), we find that Iowa private and Iowa commercial applicators tend to use the same type of pesticides (r2=0.88). White and nonwhite private applicators tended to use the same type of pesticides (North Carolinar2=0.89), as did male and female private applicators (Iowar2=0.85 and North Carolinar2=0.84). There was less similarity (r2=0.50) between the types of pesticides being used by Iowa and North Carolina private applicators. A greater portion of Iowa private applicators use personal protective equipment than do North Carolina private applicators, and pesticide application methods varied by state. This heterogeneity in potential exposures to pesticides between states should be useful for subsequent epidemiologic analyses using internal comparison groups.
  • Keywords
    pesticides , occupational exposure , cancers , noncancer toxicity , Farmers.
  • Journal title
    Environmental Research
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Environmental Research
  • Record number

    727591