Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders

Field research was undertaken in three Jamaican farming communities to understand the localized health impact of pesticide poisoning in a developing country. The primary research tool was the collection of data through an intra-household survey, complemented by field observations. The goal was to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schlosser, Tina Corinna
Other Authors: Geography
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33299
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-052799-234733/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-332992020-09-29T05:42:03Z Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders Schlosser, Tina Corinna Geography Good, Charles M. Jr. Hamilton, Sarah Richardson, Bonham C. Small-holders Pesticide Poisoning Medical Geography Jamaica Field research was undertaken in three Jamaican farming communities to understand the localized health impact of pesticide poisoning in a developing country. The primary research tool was the collection of data through an intra-household survey, complemented by field observations. The goal was to gather information on the extent to which pesticides are used, the physiological symptoms experienced during or after pesticide exposure, and the farmers' knowledge, attitude, and practice of safe pesticide use. Secondly, I examined the structural constraints to regulating pesticide usage and promoting safe practices, based on interviews with local health care providers and key officials in agriculture, health, and agro-business. <p>The research proved that acute pesticide poisoning is widespread in Jamaica. Furthermore, health outcomes varied geographically particularly as related to the nature of the crop and pest problems. There was some effort within the agricultural and medical branch of the Jamaican government to address this concern; however, evidence that farmers had widely adopted safe application practices did not exist. I found that hazardous pesticide practices were not simply traced to farmers' ignorance. Rather, farmers showed substantial awareness of safety procedures but often chose not to practice them. The matter was further complicated by the general lack of knowledge among health care providers in identification and proper treatment of poisoning. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:38:49Z 2014-03-14T20:38:49Z 1999-05-12 1999-05-27 2000-06-04 1999-06-04 Thesis etd-052799-234733 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33299 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-052799-234733/ title2.pdf body2.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Small-holders
Pesticide Poisoning
Medical Geography
Jamaica
spellingShingle Small-holders
Pesticide Poisoning
Medical Geography
Jamaica
Schlosser, Tina Corinna
Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders
description Field research was undertaken in three Jamaican farming communities to understand the localized health impact of pesticide poisoning in a developing country. The primary research tool was the collection of data through an intra-household survey, complemented by field observations. The goal was to gather information on the extent to which pesticides are used, the physiological symptoms experienced during or after pesticide exposure, and the farmers' knowledge, attitude, and practice of safe pesticide use. Secondly, I examined the structural constraints to regulating pesticide usage and promoting safe practices, based on interviews with local health care providers and key officials in agriculture, health, and agro-business. <p>The research proved that acute pesticide poisoning is widespread in Jamaica. Furthermore, health outcomes varied geographically particularly as related to the nature of the crop and pest problems. There was some effort within the agricultural and medical branch of the Jamaican government to address this concern; however, evidence that farmers had widely adopted safe application practices did not exist. I found that hazardous pesticide practices were not simply traced to farmers' ignorance. Rather, farmers showed substantial awareness of safety procedures but often chose not to practice them. The matter was further complicated by the general lack of knowledge among health care providers in identification and proper treatment of poisoning. === Master of Science
author2 Geography
author_facet Geography
Schlosser, Tina Corinna
author Schlosser, Tina Corinna
author_sort Schlosser, Tina Corinna
title Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders
title_short Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders
title_full Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders
title_fullStr Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders
title_full_unstemmed Local Realities and Structural Constraints of Agricultural Health: Pesticide Poisoning of Jamaican Small-holders
title_sort local realities and structural constraints of agricultural health: pesticide poisoning of jamaican small-holders
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33299
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-052799-234733/
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