Health and Occupational Injury Experienced by Latinx Child Farmworkers in North Carolina, USA
URI
Date
2019-12-30
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Authors
Arcury, Thomas A.
Arnold, Taylor J.
Quandt, Sara A.
Chen, Haiying
Kearney, Gregory D.
Sandberg, Joanne C.
Talton, Jennifer W.
Wiggins, Melinda F.
Daniel, Stephanie S.
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Abstract
Children as young as 10 years old are hired to work on farms in the United States (U.S.).
These children are largely Latinx. Using interview data collected from 202 North Carolina Latinx child
farmworkers in 2017, this analysis documents the heath characteristics and occupational injuries of
Latinx child farmworkers and delineates characteristics associated with their health and occupational
injuries. Latinx child farmworkers include girls (37.6%) and boys (62.4%), aged 10 to 17 years, with
17.8% being migrant farmworkers. Three-quarters reported receiving medical and dental care in
the past year. Respiratory (15.8%) and vision (20.3%) problems were prevalent. Girls more than
boys, and younger more than older children had greater health service utilization. Occupational
injuries were common, with 26.2% reporting a traumatic injury, 44.1% a dermatological injury, 42.6%
a musculoskeletal injury, and 45.5% heat-related illness in the past year. Age increased the odds
of reporting work injuries and heat-related illness, and being a non-migrant reduced the odds
of reporting work injuries. These results emphasize the need for greater documentation of child
farmworker occupational health and safety. They underscore the need to change occupational safety
policy to ensure that children working in agriculture have the same protections as those working in
all other U.S. industries.
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Citation
DOI
10.3390/ijerph17010248