191 research outputs found
Communication and information needs about complementary and alternative medicine: a qualitative study of parents of children with cancer
Background: Many parents choose support such as Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) for
themselves and their children who have cancer. The aim of this paper is to describe, how parents who have
children with cancer communicated with conventional health care providers about CAM, and what types and
sources of information they would like to receive about CAM when the child was ill.
Method: This focused ethnography draws from in-depth, semi-structured interviews conducted with 22 families in
Norway with 24 adult participants (two couples), including two individuals who had had cancer themselves. Four
domains were explored in the data analysis: the use of CAM, advice from laypeople about CAM, communication
with conventional health care providers about CAM, and parents’ information needs about CAM.
Results: Many of the participants had personal experiences with CAM before the child received the cancer
diagnosis. The health care providers did not raise the question about CAM in the consultations. However, when the
parents raised the question, they were mostly met in a positive way. The participants did not receive any
information about CAM at the hospital, which they would have appreciated. Instead, they received
recommendations about CAM from laypersons, which were mostly rejected, as the advice was not in line with their
health values/philosophy.
Conclusion: The reason participants did not disclose CAM use is that physicians did not ask them about it.
However, positive communication about conventional treatment facilitated fruitful conversations about CAM. The
participants wanted information about CAM from authoritative sources, primary from health care providers at the
hospital and the Children’s Cancer Society. They demand information about risks and benefits when using CAM as
well as whether CAM can improve the immune system, fight the cancer, and improve the quality of life of the
family. An evidence-based decision aid is warranted to enable health care providers and parents of children with
cancer to make well-informed decisions about CAM
A suite of methods for representing activity space in a healthcare accessibility study
BACKGROUND: "Activity space" has been used to examine how people's habitual movements interact with their environment, and can be used to examine accessibility to healthcare opportunities. Traditionally, the standard deviational ellipse (SDE), a Euclidean measure, has been used to represent activity space. We describe the construction and application of the SDE at one and two standard deviations, and three additional network-based measures of activity space using common tools in GIS: the road network buffer (RNB), the 30-minute standard travel time polygon (STT), and the relative travel time polygon (RTT). We compare the theoretical and methodological assumptions of each measure, and evaluate the measures by examining access to primary care services, using data from western North Carolina. RESULTS: Individual accessibility is defined as the availability of healthcare opportunities within that individual's activity space. Access is influenced by the shape and area of an individual's activity space, the spatial distribution of opportunities, and by the spatial structures that constrain and direct movement through space; the shape and area of the activity space is partly a product of how it is conceptualized and measured. Network-derived measures improve upon the SDE by incorporating the spatial structures (roads) that channel movement. The area of the STT is primarily influenced by the location of a respondent's residence within the road network hierarchy, with residents living near primary roads having the largest activity spaces. The RNB was most descriptive of actual opportunities and can be used to examine bypassing. The area of the RTT had the strongest correlation with a healthcare destination being located inside the activity space. CONCLUSION: The availability of geospatial technologies and data create multiple options for representing and operationalizing the construct of activity space. Each approach has its strengths and limitations, and presents a different view of accessibility. While the choice of method ultimately lies in the research question, interpretation of results must consider the interrelated issues of method, representation, and application. Triangulation aids this interpretation and provides a more complete and nuanced understanding of accessibility
Farmworker Exposure to Pesticides: Methodologic Issues for the Collection of Comparable Data
The exposure of migrant and seasonal farmworkers and their families to agricultural and residential pesticides is a continuing public health concern. Pesticide exposure research has been spurred on by the development of sensitive and reliable laboratory techniques that allow the detection of minute amounts of pesticides or pesticide metabolites. The power of research on farmworker pesticide exposure has been limited because of variability in the collection of exposure data, the predictors of exposure considered, the laboratory procedures used in analyzing the exposure, and the measurement of exposure. The Farmworker Pesticide Exposure Comparable Data Conference assembled 25 scientists from diverse disciplinary and organizational backgrounds to develop methodologic consensus in four areas of farmworker pesticide exposure research: environmental exposure assessment, biomarkers, personal and occupational predictors of exposure, and health outcomes of exposure. In this introduction to this mini-monograph, first, we present the rationale for the conference and its organization. Second, we discuss some of the important challenges in conducting farmworker pesticide research, including the definition and size of the farmworker population, problems in communication and access, and the organization of agricultural work. Third, we summarize major findings from each of the conference’s four foci—environmental exposure assessment, biomonitoring, predictors of exposure, and health outcomes of exposure—as well as important laboratory and statistical analysis issues that cross-cut the four foci
Health and Occupational Injury Experienced by Latinx Child Farmworkers in North Carolina, USA
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
Healthcare Utilization among Migrant Latino Farmworkers: The Case of Skin Disease
Abstract: Context: Skin diseases are common occupational illnesses for migrant farmworkers. Farmworkers face many barriers in accessing health care resources. Purpose: Framed by the Health Behavior Model, the purpose of this study was to assess health care utilization for skin disease by migrant Latino farmworkers. Methods: Three hundred and four migrant and seasonal Latino farmworkers in North Carolina were enrolled in a longitudinal study of skin disease and health care utilization over a single agricultural season. Self-reported and dermatologist-diagnosed skin condition data were collected at baseline and at up to 4 follow-up assessments. Medical visit rates were compared to national norms. Findings: Self-reported skin problems and diagnosed skin disease were common among farmworkers. However, only 34 health care visits were reported across the entire agricultural season, and none of the visits were for skin diseases. Nevertheless, self-treatment for skin conditions was common, including use of nonprescription preparations (63%), prescription products (9%), and home remedies (6%). General medical office visits were reported in 3.2% of the assessments, corresponding to 1.6 office visits per person year. Conclusions: The migrant farmworker population consists largely of young men who make little use of clinic services. Skin conditions are very common among these workers, but use of medical services for these conditions is not common. Instead, farmworkers rely primarily on self-treatment. Clinic-based studies of farmworker skin conditions will not account for most injury or disease in this population and have the potential for biased estimates. Article: Skin disease is a common form of occupational illness, and agricultural workers have the highest incidence of skin disorders of all industrial sectors with an annual incidence 4 to 6 times higher than the annual incidence for all private industry. 1 Migrant and seasonal farmworkers especially are exposed to numerous occupational and environmental risk factors (weather, mechanical devices, chemicals, plants, organic and inorganic dust, and fungi) that can result in skin disease or injury. 2 They also often live in crowded, substandard conditions that increase the risk for the spread of skin problems. 3-5 Farmworkers in North Carolina experience significant inflammatory and infectious skin diseases, including acne, irritant and allergic contact dermatitis, tinea pedis, and onychomycosis. 8 Similar to other immigrant Latino communities, farmworkers face many barriers to health care, including linguistic and cultural differences from the majority population, low educational attainment, mobility, inadequate transportation, financial strains, lack of health insurance, lack of documentation, fear of the US medical system, and a limited number of health care facilities. 9-12 However, very little research has examined health care utilization among farmworkers
Workplace, Household, and Personal Predictors of Pesticide Exposure for Farmworkers
In this article we identify factors potentially associated with pesticide exposure among farmworkers, grade the evidence in the peer-reviewed literature for such associations, and propose a minimum set of measures necessary to understand farmworker risk for pesticide exposure. Data sources we reviewed included Medline, Science Citation Index, Social Science Citation Index, PsycINFO, and AGRI-COLA databases. Data extraction was restricted to those articles that reported primary data collection and analysis published in 1990 or later. We read and summarized evidence for pesticide exposure associations. For data synthesis, articles were graded by type of evidence for association of risk factor with pesticide exposure as follows: 1 = association demonstrated in farmworkers; 2 = association demonstrated in nonfarmworker sample; 3 = plausible association proposed for farmworkers; or 4 = association plausible but not published for farmworkers. Of more than 80 studies we identified, only a third used environmental or biomarker evidence to document farmworker exposure to pesticides. Summaries of articles were compiled by level of evidence and presented in tabular form. A minimum list of data to be collected in farmworker pesticide studies was derived from these evidence tables. Despite ongoing concern about pesticide exposure of farmworkers and their families, relatively few studies have tried to test directly the association of behavioral and environmental factors with pesticide exposure in this population. Future studies should attempt to use similar behavioral, environmental, and psychosocial measures to build a body of evidence with which to better understand the risk factors for pesticide exposure among farmworkers
Eye Health and Safety Among Latino Farmworkers
Abstract: Farmworkers face a variety of risk factors for eye injuries. Measures of eye protection use and of eye safety knowledge and beliefs are based on a survey of 300 Latino farmworkers in North Carolina. Few farmworkers report using eye protection (8.3%); most (92.3%) report that employers do not provide eye protection. Approximately 70% report that they are not trained in preventing eye injuries; 81% believe that their chances of getting an eye injury are low. Many farmworkers choose to take risks in order to save time. Interventions are needed that target farmworker knowledge and beliefs about eye safety
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