The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.

Student Number : 0110574V - MPh research report - School of Public Health - Faculty of Health Sciences === Pesticide poisoning poses a health risk to individuals throughout the world although the reported global and local risk are not consistent in the literature. Mpumalanga Province has areas...

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Main Author: Booman, Aart
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/1545
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-15452019-05-11T03:41:20Z The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying. Booman, Aart occupational health occupational hygiene malaria spraying insecticide exposure Student Number : 0110574V - MPh research report - School of Public Health - Faculty of Health Sciences Pesticide poisoning poses a health risk to individuals throughout the world although the reported global and local risk are not consistent in the literature. Mpumalanga Province has areas of epidemic malaria. Spray teams, applying local insecticides to indoor surfaces operate just prior to the rainy season (October to May) to control malaria. The purpose of this cross sectional study was to compare prescribed safe handling and application practices of Mpumalanga malaria spray operators mixing and applying insecticides versus actual practices in the field. All members of the spray operating teams were included in the study. A tick list and questionnaire was utilized to observe field practices and enquire about reasons for non-compliance. Only 28% of all operators complied with prescribed safety practices and differences in compliance between mixing (38%) and application (36%) were marginal. Gloves, face shields and dust masks were not utilized as recommended and contributed to the highest levels of non-compliance. Compliance was found to be dependent on gender, age, years of experience, education level and employment status. The low compliance rate necessitates further investigation of the malaria programme occupational safety management system. All stakeholders need to be aware of the consequences of pesticide poisoning and collaborate in efforts to work towards prevention rather than cure. 2006-10-31T13:14:40Z 2006-10-31T13:14:40Z 2006-10-31T13:14:40Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/1545 en 265271 bytes 6476 bytes application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic occupational health
occupational hygiene
malaria spraying
insecticide exposure
spellingShingle occupational health
occupational hygiene
malaria spraying
insecticide exposure
Booman, Aart
The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
description Student Number : 0110574V - MPh research report - School of Public Health - Faculty of Health Sciences === Pesticide poisoning poses a health risk to individuals throughout the world although the reported global and local risk are not consistent in the literature. Mpumalanga Province has areas of epidemic malaria. Spray teams, applying local insecticides to indoor surfaces operate just prior to the rainy season (October to May) to control malaria. The purpose of this cross sectional study was to compare prescribed safe handling and application practices of Mpumalanga malaria spray operators mixing and applying insecticides versus actual practices in the field. All members of the spray operating teams were included in the study. A tick list and questionnaire was utilized to observe field practices and enquire about reasons for non-compliance. Only 28% of all operators complied with prescribed safety practices and differences in compliance between mixing (38%) and application (36%) were marginal. Gloves, face shields and dust masks were not utilized as recommended and contributed to the highest levels of non-compliance. Compliance was found to be dependent on gender, age, years of experience, education level and employment status. The low compliance rate necessitates further investigation of the malaria programme occupational safety management system. All stakeholders need to be aware of the consequences of pesticide poisoning and collaborate in efforts to work towards prevention rather than cure.
author Booman, Aart
author_facet Booman, Aart
author_sort Booman, Aart
title The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
title_short The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
title_full The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
title_fullStr The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
title_full_unstemmed The practices of spray operators in the Mpumalanga Malaria Control Programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
title_sort practices of spray operators in the mpumalanga malaria control programme using insecticides for residual indoor spraying.
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/1545
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