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Severe back pain among farmworker high school students from Starr County, Texas: baseline results.
Authors
Shipp-EM; Cooper-SP; Del Junco-DJ; Delclos-GL; Burau-KD; Tortolero-SR
Source
Ann Epidemiol 2007 Feb; 17(2):132-141
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annepidem.2006.06.011 
NIOSHTIC No.
20031562 
Abstract
Purpose: This cohort study is among the first to estimate the prevalence of and examine potential risk factors for severe back pain (resulting in medical care, 4+ hours of time lost, or pain lasting 1+ weeks) among adolescent farmworkers. These youth often perform tasks requiring bent/stooped postures and heavy lifting. Methods: Of 2536 students who participated (response rate across the three public high schools, 61.2% to 83.9%), 410 students were farmworkers (largely Hispanic and migrant). Students completed a self-administered Web-based survey including farm work/nonfarm work and back-pain items relating to a 9-month period. Results: The prevalence of severe back pain was 15.7% among farmworkers and 12.4% among nonworkers. The prevalence increased to 19.1% among farm workers (n = 131) who also did nonfarm work. A multiple logistic regression for farmworkers showed that significantly increased adjusted odds ratios for severe back pain were female sex (4.59); prior accident/back injury (9.04); feeling tense, stressed, or anxious sometimes/often (4.11); lifting/carrying heavy objects not at work (2.98); current tobacco use (2.79); 6+ years involved in migrant farm work (5.02); working with/around knives (3.87); and working on corn crops (3.40). Conclusions: Areas for further research include ergonomic exposure assessments and examining the effects of doing farm work and nonfarm work simultaneously.
Keywords
Farmers; Agriculture; Demographic-characteristics; Sex-factors; Women; Sampling; Sampling-methods; Risk-factors; Risk-analysis; Agricultural-industry; Agricultural-workers; Age-factors; Age-groups; Back-injuries; Musculoskeletal-system-disorders; Epidemiology; Statistical-analysis
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