Title: Susan Bauer, MA, MPH
1What Price Our Produce? The Impact of Farming
on the Health and Wellbeing ofOur Children
- Susan Bauer, MA, MPH
- Executive Director
- Community Health Partnership of Illinois
- sbauer_at_chpofil.org
- October 18, 2012
2 3Community Health Partnership of Illinois Four
Decades Serving Farmworkers, Rural Communities
- Primary Health Care Clinics (FQHC) Aurora,
Woodstock, Kankakee, Rantoul, Mendota, Harvard - School/Head Start based Services
- Environmental/Occupational Health Promotion
- Chronic Disease Management
- Cancer Prevention and Screening
- Peer-led Health Promotion/Advocacy
- Patient Majority Governing Board
4Trouble on the Farm NRDC 1998 Report
- Pre-WWII life on the farm healthy living
- Today pervasive use of pesticides on farms,
exurban encroachment potential for higher
exposure to toxins for farm, rural, exurban
children - Increased consciousness re health risks to
children who consume products treated with
agricultural chemicals - Increasing body of evidence that those risks are
compounded by environmental exposures for
children on, near farms that use agricultural
chemicals on crops (Lu et. al, 1999)
5FOOD FOR THOUGHT
- Agriculture consistently ranks among top 2-3 most
hazardous jobs in US, yet least regulated, fueled
by the Great American Agrarian Myth - Occupational health risks are indistinguishable
from environmental health risks - Child labor is alive and well, tragically
- Children as young as 16 can (and do) perform
hazardous jobs - Children as young as 12 can work on any farm
- Younger children can (and do) work legally with
permission of parent
6What Realities Do Migrant Farmworkers Face
Every Day?
- 1.5-3 million farm laborers in the US 65,000 in
Illinois (6 are children (90,000-180,000 based
on 2000 NAWS) - Workers (including children), lack legal
protections, immigration status, very low income,
uninsurable - 80 farms/nurseries in Kane County
7Systemic Barriers to Healthy, Safe Farms
- OSHA/IDPH Field Sanitation only and only for
farms with 11/10 workers, IL does not cover
workers who do not travel from home (e.g., local
teen detasslers) - EPA Worker Protection Standard Delegates
enforcement to Depts. of Ag. Child Labor Laws
inadequate to protect children
8Realities of Migrant Farmworkers that Impact
Health Status
- Natl Ag Worker Survey (2000)
- Young (50lt31 6 lt18)
- Male (75)
- Immigrants from Mexico (71)
- CHP UDS (20110
- Uninsured, Uninsurable (93 AGE 20
- Sub-poverty wages (90)
9IMPACT ON CHILDREN WHO LIVE NEAR FARMSStudy of
109 children, median house dust concentrations
for organophosphates inhouse dust were 7 times
higher for agricultural family children than
others. Median concentrations of pesticide
metabolites in agricultural childrens urine were
5 times higher than for other children.
Proximity to farmland increased exposures. In
some cases the distinction between farmland and
residence is blurred, as when a home is in the
midst or on the boundary of an orchard (Lu et
al, 1999, Washington state)
10What is Being Done to Address the
Problem?
- Blueprint for Protecting Children in Agriculture
(Marshfield Clinic, WI) - Regulatory Reform (Ag Child Labor Hazardous
Occupation Orders, NIOSH) - Proposed CARE Act (Childrens Act for Responsible
Employment) - Exposure Prevention Education (NRDC, MCN,NCFH)
- Peer-Led Health Education and Advocacy
- Community Health Workers
- Promotores/as de Salud (Health Promoters)
11WHILE WE CONTINUE TO FIGHT FOR MEANINGFUL REFORM
IN AGRICULTURE PRACTICES/LAWS, WHAT CAN WE DO
TODAY?
- Initiated in 1996 with NIOSH occupational health
research grant - Preceded by many years of assistance from MHP
- First step gain support of clinical staff
- Tailored to special needs of MSFW population
12Leadership Development Around Health and
Wellness
- Community health educators, advocates
- National Award in 2005
- Expanded to three clinic sites (Aurora)
- Grounded in principles of Popular Education
(Paolo Freire)
13 Underlying Principles of CHPs Promotores de
Salud Program
- Asset-based Model of Community Assessment,
Response - Community is not the object of the
intervention, but a key partner in the delivery
of the intervention - Most effective strategies to modify risk
perception, behavior are created, delivered by
the community
14Who Are OurPromotores de Salud?
- Farmworkers with
- Natural leadership skills
- Trust of their peers
- Interest in health, safety
- Desire to learn and share what they learn
- Everyday interaction with target community
- Support of family to make commitment necessary to
do their work
15Promotores Roles and Activities
- Research (administer surveys, recruit
participants, review tools, conduct
intervention/observations) - Promote safe workplace practices with managers
- Health Promotion (one on one, small group
platicas) - Model desired behavior (e.g., Protective
Eyewear) - Referrals/Transportation for Appointments
- ID, communicate to clinic unmet individual,
community needs
16CLOSING THOUGHTS
- Antiquated US child labor laws, and inadequate
regulation and enforcement of Ag protective laws,
at worst have proved fatal, and at a minimum
compromise the health and wellbeing of children
who work or live on farms - Urgent need to expand our locus of concern re
pesticide exposure in child consumers to include
children involved in crop production, and those
who live on or near farms that employ harmful
chemical in crop production - Work to pass the CARE Act
-
17 18RESOURCES and REFERENCES
- http//www.marshfieldclinic.org/nccrahs
- http//www.nrdc.org/health/kids/farm/farminx.asp
- http//www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/childag
- http//www.hrw.org/support-care
- www.farmworkerjustice.org
- www.ncfh.org
- www.migrantclinician.org
- www.migranthealth.org
- www.spcpweb.org