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Pesticide Risk Communication, Risk Perception, and Self-Protective Behaviors Among Farmworkers in Californias Salinas Valley
Nolan L. Cabrera*
and
James O. Leckie
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ncabrera{at}ucla.edu.
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Abstract |
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Agricultural pesticide use is the highest of any industry, yet there is little research evaluating farmworkers understandings of the health risks chemical exposure poses. This study examines pesticide education, risk perception, and self-protective behaviors among farmworkers in Californias Salinas Valley. Fifty current and former farmworkers were interviewed for this research. Despite several potential barriers to risk communication (e.g., language differences and nonuniform methods of pesticide safety training), the respondents understood many of the potential health consequences of exposure while holding elevated levels of risk perception relative to the general public. They received information on the health effects of pesticide exposure from both grower-based training and personal social networks; however, the respondents continued to participate in unnecessarily risky behaviors.
First published on February 24, 2009, doi:10.1177/0739986309331877
Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 2009;31:258.
A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2009

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