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Prevention of Agricultural Injuries: An Evaluation of an Education-based Intervention LM Hagel, W Pickett, P Pahwa, L Day, RJ Brison, B Marlenga, T Crowe, P Snodgrass, K Ulmer, JA Dosman
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Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of an agricultural health and safety program in reducing risks for injury.
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Intervention Agricultural Health and Safety Network Features of the program community-based co-directed by members of the population at risk well funded sustained program over 19 years
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FARM SAFETY ISSUE No. of Times Issue Addressed 1988 to 2006 (all network years) 1999 to 2006 (most recent 8 years) NN Tractor safety2216 Farm machinery safety3619 Non-machinery hazards147 Burden of farm injury1611 Personal and farm protection166 Special populations at risk86 Total Interventions11265
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Methods
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Design: Cross-sectional survey
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Setting Southern Saskatchewan Rural Municipalities Saskatchewan, Canada
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Sampling Multi stage Rural Municipal (RM) level Farm level Individual level
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Data Collection Instrument standardized mail questionnaire key informant on each farm January to April, 2007
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Data Collection Impact and Outcome Measures safety practices, farm hazards –farm level injury history –individual level
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Data Collection Exposure Measure years of membership 3 levels of exposure –None –1 to 7 years of membership –8 or more years
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Statistical Analyses Descriptive –demographic and operational characteristics Analytic –regression analyses adjusted RR (95% CI) account for clustering, binomial regression
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Results
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Participants 50 Rural Municipalities 2,392 Farms AHSN > 8 yrs n = 664 farms AHSN < 8 yrs n = 1034 farms AHSN 0 yrs n = 688 farms
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§ adjusted for number of family members; age of the owner/operator; main family residence; education of owner/operator. † unable to calculate due to small numbers ‡ adjusted for number of family members; age of the owner/operator; main family residence. § adjusted for number of family members; age of the owner/operator; main family residence; education of the owner operator and number of tractors, combines, augers, grain bins and water hazards as appropriate. Years in AHSNSignificance FactorHighLowNone (%) Grain production869087* Brown soil zone123121* University educated141522* Vulnerable populations: children young workers >65 year olds 54 39 37 47 38 34 52 41 37 * NS Demographic Comparisons
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§ adjusted for number of family members; age of the owner/operator; main family residence; education of owner/operator. † unable to calculate due to small numbers ‡ adjusted for number of family members; age of the owner/operator; main family residence. § adjusted for number of family members; age of the owner/operator; main family residence; education of the owner operator and number of tractors, combines, augers, grain bins and water hazards as appropriate. Years in AHSNAdjusted RR HighLowNoneNone vs. High (%) RR(95% CI) ROPS absent1612160.95(0.69 - 1.30) Shields absent on combines13980.64(0.41 - 1.01) Shields absent on augers2016150.83(0.59 - 1.17) Ladder cages absent79 801.05(0.98 - 1.13) No water hazard barriers5043471.13(0.96 - 1.33) Physical Safety Hazards
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Years in AHSNAdjusted RR Children younger than 7 years of age HighLowNoneNone vs. High (%) RR(95% CI) Present in worksite3837431.01(0.84 - 1.21) Ride in cabbed tractor13 120.86(0.53 - 1.41) Assigned small farm jobs1413 0.96(0.61 – 1.50) Present during farm work2829300.99(0.76 - 1.28) Hazardous Practices Children
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Years in AHSNAdjusted RR Young workers 13 to 18 years old HighLowNoneNone vs. High (%) RR(95% CI) Operate tractor > 20hp3230 0.95(0.68 - 1.32) Operate tractor w/out ROPS12 111.15(0.53 – 2.49) Operate equip > 20 yrs1620 1.14(0.65 – 2.01) Work at heights8780.70(0.70 - 1.81) Work with large animals1819180.82(0.48 – 1.43) Hazardous Practises Young Workers
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Years in AHSNAdjusted RR Young workers 13 to 18 years old HighLowNoneNone vs. High (%) RR(95% CI) Wear protective equipment3334290.91(0.65 - 1.27) Trained before equip use6064671.09(0.89 - 1.39) Trained with large animals5047561.07(0.82 - 1.41) Supervised operating equip4046431.10(0.81 - 1.51) Supervised w large animals4247481.04(0.77 - 1.40) Training and Supervision Young Workers
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Years in AHSNAdjusted RR HighLowNoneNone vs. High (%) RR(95% CI) Farm injuries 20069970.99(0.74 - 1.32) By location of treatment Hospital or emergency3321.00(0.99 - 1. 01) Non-hospital setting6651.00(0.98 - 1.01) Injuries
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Limitations Non-compliance with intervention Not possible to evaluate safety consciousness among non-participants unable to control for effect of exposure to other interventions
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Strengths large and longstanding intervention large study population: –5 492 people, 2 386 farms robust evaluation: –“hard” outcome measures
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Conclusion 1 After 19 years, the educational interventions were not associated with observable differences in farm safety practices, physical farm hazards or farm- related injury outcomes
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Conclusion 2 There is a need for the agricultural sector to extend its injury prevention initiatives to the full public health model. Education alone is insufficient. Education EngineeringEnforcement
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Publication: Hagel LM, Pickett W, Pahwa P, Day L, Brison RJ, Marlenga BL, Crowe T, Snodgrass P, Ulmer K and Dosman JA. Prevention of agricultural injuries: An evaluation of an educational intervention. Injury Prevention 2008; 14(5)
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