The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach

Objectives: to explore the decision-making process of agricultural workers associated with pesticide use and exposure; to deduce whether these processes differ between pesticide users and non-users; and to analyze the characteristics of these differences. Methodology: T...

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Main Author: Ysabel Polanco López de Mesa
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Antioquia 2020-04-01
Series:Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.udea.edu.co/index.php/fnsp/article/view/331277
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spelling doaj-9ba6b83a23ad422d994b73f8a9a7b9382020-11-25T02:51:18ZspaUniversidad de AntioquiaRevista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública0120-386X0120-386X2020-04-013821710.17533/udea.rfnsp.e331277The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approachYsabel Polanco López de Mesa0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2616-0160Universidad de AntioquiaObjectives: to explore the decision-making process of agricultural workers associated with pesticide use and exposure; to deduce whether these processes differ between pesticide users and non-users; and to analyze the characteristics of these differences. Methodology: This study used a grounded theory approach to understand the decision-making process for pesticide use/non-use among agricultural workers in San Cristobal, Colombia. This study involved participant observation, individual interviews, and focus groups. Results: the theory developed to explain the decision-making process for pesticide use showed several categories including: the prospect of having a good harvest, efficient pest control, habituation to the use of pesticides, feeling obligated to use them, poor knowledge about pesticides, believing that pesticides increase the quality of the products, positive attitudes towards pesticide use, family support towards pesticide use, community pressure and acceptance, economic fear, and market pressure. In the non-pesticide user group categories included: having better health, pesticides considered harmful for human health, pesticides being deleterious for the environment, habituation to working without pesticides, family and economic support, and negative attitude towards pesticide use. The decision-making process for personal protective equipment (PPE) use encompassed categories such as: feelings of powerlessness, economic difficulties, and belief that equipment is not necessary. Discussion: The decision-making process for pesticide use in agricultural communities is complex and varies between pesticide users and non-users. Conclusions: It is important to consider the intricate process of pesticide use in order to orient interventions in the agricultural sector. https://revistas.udea.edu.co/index.php/fnsp/article/view/331277perceptionsagriculturepesticide exposureexposuregrounded theory
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ysabel Polanco López de Mesa
spellingShingle Ysabel Polanco López de Mesa
The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach
Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
perceptions
agriculture
pesticide exposure
exposure
grounded theory
author_facet Ysabel Polanco López de Mesa
author_sort Ysabel Polanco López de Mesa
title The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach
title_short The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach
title_full The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach
title_fullStr The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach
title_full_unstemmed The decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in Colombia: a grounded theory approach
title_sort decision-making process of synthetic pesticide use in agricultural communities in colombia: a grounded theory approach
publisher Universidad de Antioquia
series Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
issn 0120-386X
0120-386X
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Objectives: to explore the decision-making process of agricultural workers associated with pesticide use and exposure; to deduce whether these processes differ between pesticide users and non-users; and to analyze the characteristics of these differences. Methodology: This study used a grounded theory approach to understand the decision-making process for pesticide use/non-use among agricultural workers in San Cristobal, Colombia. This study involved participant observation, individual interviews, and focus groups. Results: the theory developed to explain the decision-making process for pesticide use showed several categories including: the prospect of having a good harvest, efficient pest control, habituation to the use of pesticides, feeling obligated to use them, poor knowledge about pesticides, believing that pesticides increase the quality of the products, positive attitudes towards pesticide use, family support towards pesticide use, community pressure and acceptance, economic fear, and market pressure. In the non-pesticide user group categories included: having better health, pesticides considered harmful for human health, pesticides being deleterious for the environment, habituation to working without pesticides, family and economic support, and negative attitude towards pesticide use. The decision-making process for personal protective equipment (PPE) use encompassed categories such as: feelings of powerlessness, economic difficulties, and belief that equipment is not necessary. Discussion: The decision-making process for pesticide use in agricultural communities is complex and varies between pesticide users and non-users. Conclusions: It is important to consider the intricate process of pesticide use in order to orient interventions in the agricultural sector.
topic perceptions
agriculture
pesticide exposure
exposure
grounded theory
url https://revistas.udea.edu.co/index.php/fnsp/article/view/331277
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