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Occupational Injuries of Latinx Child Farmworkers in North Carolina: Associations With Work Safety Culture

Thomas A. Arcury, Sara A. Quandt, Taylor J. Arnold, Haiying Chen, Stephanie S. Daniel

2020Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This paper examines the association of occupational injuries with work safety culture among Latinx child farmworkers. METHODS: Interviews were conducted in 2017 with 202 Latinx farmworkers aged 10 to 17 years. RESULTS: Occupational injuries were common among the child farmworkers: for example, 66.8% reported any work injury and 45.5% reported heat-related illness. Work safety culture was inadequate; for example, most did not receive safety training, one-third reported having worked piece-rate; only a few field sanitation services were available, and perceived work safety climate was low. Work safety culture had a mixed association with occupational injuries, with safety training and a better perceived work safety climate having a direct association with occupational injuries. CONCLUSIONS: Policy is needed to reduce child farmworker injuries. Strategies to improve the predictive value of the work safety culture model are required.

Topics & Concepts

Occupational safety and healthWork (physics)SanitationInjury preventionSafety cultureHuman factors and ergonomicsPoison controlOccupational injuryEnvironmental healthSuicide preventionMedicineEffective safety trainingOccupational health nursingPublic healthNursingHealth educationEngineeringManagementEconomicsPathologyMechanical engineeringAgriculture and Farm SafetyOccupational Health and Safety ResearchPesticide Exposure and Toxicity
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