Agricultural work can negatively impact environmental and worker health in several ways. Farmers and agricultural workers face high risks of occupational injury, respiratory illness from exposures to dusts and gases, dermatological conditions, and certain cancers. The farm environment can also expose families to pesticides and other chemicals through air, water, and food sources. Key health issues addressed included respiratory disease, cancer risks, reproductive health impacts, and water pollution from agricultural runoff.
Agricultural work can negatively impact environmental and worker health in several ways. Farmers and agricultural workers face high risks of occupational injury, respiratory illness from exposures to dusts and gases, dermatological conditions, and certain cancers. The farm environment can also expose families to pesticides and other chemicals through air, water, and food sources. Key health issues addressed included respiratory disease, cancer risks, reproductive health impacts, and water pollution from agricultural runoff.
Agricultural work can negatively impact environmental and worker health in several ways. Farmers and agricultural workers face high risks of occupational injury, respiratory illness from exposures to dusts and gases, dermatological conditions, and certain cancers. The farm environment can also expose families to pesticides and other chemicals through air, water, and food sources. Key health issues addressed included respiratory disease, cancer risks, reproductive health impacts, and water pollution from agricultural runoff.
Agricultural work can negatively impact environmental and worker health in several ways. Farmers and agricultural workers face high risks of occupational injury, respiratory illness from exposures to dusts and gases, dermatological conditions, and certain cancers. The farm environment can also expose families to pesticides and other chemicals through air, water, and food sources. Key health issues addressed included respiratory disease, cancer risks, reproductive health impacts, and water pollution from agricultural runoff.
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ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH IN
AGRICULTURE
The basic requirements for a healthy
environment are said to include, clean air, safe and sufficient water, adequate and safe food, and a safe a peaceful place in which to live • Agricultural health is the study of environmental, occupational, dietary, and genetic factors on the health of farmers, farm families, pesticide applicators, and others who work with and are exposed to agricultural chemicals. • farming and agricultural work are associated with high rates of occupational injury, disability and illness. • Agricultural work has a work accident death rate that is similar to mining and construction and that these three industries are the most dangerous. • Farmers and agricultural workers are at increased risk for a variety of illnesses including respiratory disorders, dermatologic conditions, and cancer • The farm is a unique workplace, few situations the workers and their families often live at the worksite. Thus, farm families may be at risk for disease related to chronic environmental exposures that occur outside the usual definition of work. • For example, acute pesticide poisoning during application of pesticides. Chronic exposure to lower levels of pesticides in the environment on the farm (air, water, or food) may also be of concern to the health of farm families. Respiratory Disease • There is a high prevalence of respiratory symptoms in farmers. Much of the symptoms reported in large surveys suggest the presence of chronic bronchitis and the occurrence of episodes of acute bronchitis. • The problem goes beyond the mere presence of symptoms. It is apparent that some farming groups have accelerated declines in lung function leading to chronic airflow obstruction • The work environments with the highest risk for chronic bronchitis are those with exposure to grain dust, swine confinement buildings, and poultry housing. • vulnerable populations such as the elderly, children, asthmatics and other susceptible persons. Cancer • Farmers appear to experience elevated rates for several cancers, including leukemia, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, multiple myeloma, soft-tissue sarcoma, and cancers of the skin, lip, stomach, brain, and prostate. • There was a positive correlation between atrazine and leukemia, 2,4-D and leukemia, captan and leukemia, atrazine and brain cancer, and atrazine and testicular cancer, in Hispanic males Arsenic • High levels of arsenic exposure are thought to cause reproductive, neurologic, respiratory, hematologic, hepatic, diabetic, and dermal disorders. • They estimated that the 20 μg/L of arsenic would cause an excess lifetime risk of 45 bladder cancers and 27 lung cancers for 10,000 males. Reproductive health • Many pesticides have been identified as having endocrine and reproductive effects based on animal toxicology studies : dibromochloropropane, a nematocide Other Health Effects • Effects of pesticides and other agents on child development, cardiovascular healthEffects of pesticides and other agents on child development, cardiovascular health • Persons living near the intensive swine operations who experienced the odors reported significantly more tension, more depression, more anger, less vigor, more fatigue, and more confusion than control subjects as measured by the Profile of Mood States exposures in agricultural work • Organic dusts are the most common respiratory exposures • Toxic organic dusts can occur in association with silage, grain dust, straw, wood chips, and animal confinement buildings. The major toxic components of organic dusts
• Derived from bacterial and fungal contamination such
as endotoxin, glucans, and mycotoxins. • Endotoxin is a lipopolysaccharide component of the cell wall of Gram-negative bacteria. • Gram-negative bacteria air samples are Enterobacter, Acinetobacter, Enterococcus, Moraxella, Pseudomonas, and E.Coli. • Glucans are cell wall components of fungi and molds such as Aspergillus, Scopulariopsis, Pencillium, Geotrichum, Mucor, and Fusarium. Toxic gases • Nitrogen dioxide is produced and accumulates above the silage • When nitrogen dioxide dissolves into water, nitrous acid and nitric acid are formed. • Nitrogen dioxide is an irritant to mucous membranes. Less severe exposures cause cough, headache, and dyspnea. • After severe exposures acute pulmonary edema may occur. • Other sources of toxic gases are those emitted from livestock confinementoperations, anure pits, manure lagoons, and from sites of manure land application • The gases aregenerated from urine and feces and also from microbial degeneration of manure • the main gases of interest are hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, methane, and carbon dioxide. • Methane and carbon dioxide are dangerous at very high concentrations and act as asphyxiants. Hydrogen sulfide • Hydrogen sulfide can be immediately toxic and exposure to levels in excess of 100 ppm can cause loss of consciousness and death • The mechanism of this type of poisoning is through effects on the oxygen transport system in mitochondria. • levels above 150 ppm it quickly poisons the olfactory system, hindering the ability to detect high levels through the sense of smell Ammonia • The mechanism of toxicity is through damage to airway epithelium. • Ammonia is water-soluble and is quickly absorbed into airway secretions. • Ammonia of 50 to 150 ppm will cause severe cough and irritation of mucous membranes. • Higher concentrations can cause permanent scarring and massive exposures are fatal. Odors • More than 24 odorous chemicals have been identified in the emissions from livestock feeding operations • Ammonia and hydrogen sulfide, described above, are odorous. Volatile acids, mercaptans, and amines Water Pollution • water pollution in the U.S. was estimated that agriculture contributes to the impairment of at least 173,529 river miles, 3,183,159 lake acres, and 2,971 estuary square miles • 20 % of the pollution from agriculture due to intensive livestock feeding operations • Manure pollution occurs from • direct discharges from manure storage, lagoons, stockpiles into surface water and from application of manure onto fields Ammonia • Ammonia (both the ionized form, ammonium, and the un-ionized form) is produced when microorganisms break down organic nitrogen products in manure • Ammonia is toxic to aquatic life and has been responsible for fish kills. • Ammonia is converted easily to nitrate and can lead to nutrient overenrichment of surface waters. This can lead to nuisance algae blooms which can lead to reduced levels of dissolved oxygen, production of chlorinated byproducts that are carcinogenic, and clogging of water treatment facilities. Nitrate • The process of nitrification occurs in aerobic environments and converts ammonium to nitrite and then to nitrate. • Nitrite is toxic to most fish but this is unusual because of the rapid conversion to nitrate • Nitrate is biologically available to plants and is a valuable fertilizer • Nitrate is however associated with health effects in humans. Acute nitrate toxicity is due primarily to its conversion to nitrite, which oxidizes the Fe(+2) form of iron in hemoglobin to the Fe(+3) state. This compound methemoglobin) does not bind oxygen, resulting in reduced oxygen carrying capacity of the blood. Terima kasih