Title: Health Effects of Pesticide Use Evidence from Bangladesh
1Health Effects of Pesticide Use Evidence from
Bangladesh
- Susmita Dasgupta
- Craig Meisner
- DECRG-IE, The World Bank
2Pesticide consumption (metric tons)
Pesticide consumption has more than doubled in
the past decade
Source Department of Plant Protection Wing,
Bangladesh
3Alarming Composition of Pesticides
- A Food Agriculture Organization (FAO) analysis
of active ingredients in use has revealed - high shares of chemicals (e.g., carbamates and
organophosphates) with established
Epidemiological links with Non-Hodgkins
lymphoma, leukemia, lung cancer, aplastic anemia,
fetal death, hormonal changes, DNA damage, birth
defects, and abnormal sperm, ovaries and eggs.
4Active Ingredients Used (sold) in the
Agricultural Sector, Bangladesh
5Need for Careful Assessment and Planning
- Current projections suggest that the agricultural
output of Bangladesh needs to grow several times
during the next several decades, as the
population of Bangladesh continues to grow and
incomes increase. - Bangladesh, a densely populated country (997
people km2 in 2000), will have to increase yields
from the land currently under cultivation in
order to serve this increased demand. - During the past several decades, rising
agricultural productivity has been driven by an
increased utilization of capital and chemicals
(pesticides, fertilizers) and genetic alteration
of crops. - The cited increase in the use of toxic chemicals
warrant careful assessment of the current
situation and experimentation with feasible
alternative production systems, for example,
Integrated Pest Management/ and organic farming
techniques.
6Limited Secondary Data on Pesticides
- The Department of Plant Protection, Ministry of
Agriculture maintains - Time series of yearly consumption of pesticides.
- A list is complied every year to indicate which
pesticides (by active ingredient and company)
have been given permission to be sold in the
market. - However, the popular belief is as large scale
smuggling of pesticide from neighboring countries
takes place, both the yearly consumption and list
of permitted pesticides actually understate the
amount of pesticides being consumed as well as
the variety of pesticides available in the market.
7Current Information on Health Effects
- Historical information on the health effects of
pesticide use in Bangladesh is not available.
Although the Director General of Health Services
(DGHS) maintains aggregate data on poisoning
related morbidity or death up to 1998-99,
information by source of poisoning (i.e.
morbidity and mortality related to pesticides) is
not available. - A newly improved system of health-related
information is being introduced by the DGHS. The
new system (information is compiled on the basis
of source of poisoning, e.g., poisoning with
organophosphates treated as a separate and
distinct entry) initially covered only two
districts beginning in 2000-01 Gazipur and
Narsingdi. The new system is expected to
gradually extend its coverage to other districts
as well over time.
8World Bank Research on Pesticides
9Pesticide Applications Reported by Survey
Respondents
One in five pesticides reported by survey
respondents has been classified by the WHO as
Extremely Hazardous.
10Pesticide Applications Reported by Survey
Respondents
- Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
- The survey cited 18 applications of Endrin and 40
applications of Heptachlor were cited in the
survey. - DDT is still sold in the retail markets.
11Use of Protective Clothing
- The study found that the use of protective
clothing during mixing and spraying of pesticides
was not a common practice. - Farmers usually worked in the fields and sprayed
pesticides bare footed (only 1 reported wearing
sandals) - 2 wear gloves while spraying pesticides
- 57 of the farming population cover their head
with gamchha while working in the fields - 8 reportedly wear hats
- 6 use locally available cotton masks (the cotton
mask in use is, essentially, an ordinary piece of
cloth kept in place by strings made of cloth
hence quite ineffective) - 3 use eye glasses.
12Health Effects
- Acute
- mild headaches
- flu-like symptoms
- skin rashes
- blurred vision
- other neurological disorders
- Chronic
- cardiopulmonary problems
- neurological and hematological symptoms
- adverse dermal effects
13Overall Health Effects found in the Survey
47 of the farmers and pesticide applicators in
the survey reported frequent health problems such
as irritation in their eyes, headaches,
dizziness, vomiting, shortness of breath, skin
effects, and even convulsions among others.
14Overall Health Effects found in the Survey
- 47 of the farmers and pesticide applicators in
the survey reported frequent health problems such
as irritation in their eyes, headaches,
dizziness, vomiting, shortness of breath, skin
effects, and even convulsions among others. - Among those (respondents) who experienced
ailments 86 were quite sure that their ailments
were due to exposure to pesticides. - The interviews further revealed that 28 of the
respondents experienced multiple health effects,
with the maximum number of ailments as five.
15Specific Health Effects found in the Survey
- Among the most perceptible health problems
encountered in the survey, eye effects,
neurological effects (headache, dizziness),
dermal effects and gastrointestinal tract effects
(vomiting) were the most common. - Right after application of pesticides
- 27 of the respondents reported irritation in
the eyes - 33 reported headache/ and dizziness
- 14 reported skin irritation
- 9 reported vomiting
16Duration of Reported Ailments
17Safer Alternative Integrated Pest Management
(IPM)
In contrast to the 47 among the general
pesticide-using population only 31 of the IPM
farmers reported health problems such as
irritation in their eyes, headaches, dizziness,
vomiting, shortness of breath and skin
effects. Statistical analysis confirmed the
difference in health effects is significant.
18Is Environmentally-Friendly Agriculture Less
Profitable for Farmers?Evidence on Integrated
Pest Management
19Regional Distribution of Survey Respondents
District Conventional Farmers IPM Farmers
Bogra 27 0
Chapainawabganj 3 0
Chittagong 56 0
Comilla 61 31
Jessore 111 54
Kishoreganj 35 20
Munshiganj 25 0
Narsingdi 82 0
Rajshahi 137 8
Rangpur 68 26
Mymensingh 84 0
Total 689 139
20Adoption of IPM
- Education, prior training, experience, ownership
and poor health have significant positive effect
on IPM adoption probability. - IPM Techniques in Practice
- Manual removal of pests (70 of the sample),
- Use of natural parasites and predators (58),
- Light traps (14),
- Crop rotation (10)
- Smoke (5).
21Reasons behind IPM Adoption
- Ministry officials recommendations (41)
- Cost-saving from reduced pesticide use (33)
- Environmental benefits (12)
- Improved health (6)
22Comparative Input-Use, Yield, Profitability, Soil
and Environmental Effects
- Input-use accounting, conventional production
functions and frontier production estimation
suggested - The productivity of IPM rice farming is not
significantly different from the productivity of
conventional farming. - Since IPM reduces pesticide costs with no
countervailing loss in production, it appears to
be more profitable than conventional rice
farming. - Our interview results also suggest substantial
health and ecological benefits.
23Health Effects of IPM Farmer Interviews
- Have you noticed any changes in your health
condition? - Shahid Hossain - One of his neighbors who used to
apply pesticides was suffering from illness.
After IPM training Shahid Hossain and others
convinced him to stop using pesticides. Now his
neighbor is much better health-wise. - Chittaranjan Das - used to feel dizzy and itchy
all over his body after spraying pesticides. Now
he does not have those problems since he stopped
using pesticides. - During the period when Haripada Das used to apply
pesticides he and others suffered from various
illnesses. However, after stopping pesticide use
they no longer suffer from those health problems.
24Observed Change in Soil, Water and Air Quality
after IPM adoption
25Effects of IPM on Soil Farmer Interviews
- Has the IPM method changed the productivity of
the soil? - Shahid Hossain - before 2000 (when he used
pesticides), productivity per 33 decimals of land
was 15/16 maund (1 maund37.5 kg) of rice whereas
since 2000 the yield has been 20/22 maund with
land size and fertilizer use remaining the same.
Thus he gained from using IPM. - ChittaRanjan Das - IPM has brought positive
changes in productivity. He used to get 15-18
maunds of paddy from 50 decimals of land when he
applied pesticides, and now gets 25-35 maunds of
paddy from the same piece of land by applying
IPM. - Haripada Das - IPM increased productivity of the
soil, per season 33 decimals of land used to
produce 14-15 maunds of rice using pesticides,
now producing 20-22 maunds of rice under IPM.
26Recommendations
- Information system on pesticides
- Monitoring health and environmental effects of
pesticides - Evaluation and promotion of safer alternatives