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Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers in the United States: A Review of Health Hazards, Status, and Policy

Author: Sakala, Carol
Date Published: 1987


Although the occupation and associated living conditions of migrant and seasonal agricultural farmworkers in the U.S. pose exceptional health hazards to the workers and their dependents, relatively few occupational health professionals have been involved with this group. This study examines the basis for this neglect and proposes a definition of the population that should be considered in farmworker health policy. It then reviews existing evidence regarding hazards of four major occupational exposures--pesticides, the sun, injuries, and poor field sanitation--and policies that have been developed to address those hazards. The extremely negative health consequences of farmworker living conditions, which are indirect occupational hazards, are also summarized. Numerous policy, planning, and research recommendations are made. Adequate solutions for this impoverished and powerless group, however, will require significant sociopolitical advances, such as are developing with unionization and other forms of political organization.

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Number of Pages: 29